Every two seconds, somewhere in the world, a woman goes into labour.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!It should be a moment defined by anticipation, support, and care. Instead, for millions, it is defined by something far more confronting: the absence of clean water.
WaterAid Australia’s new global maternal health campaign, “Time to Deliver”, brings this reality into sharp focus, revealing a staggering inequality that still shapes childbirth today. In the world’s least developed countries, a woman gives birth every two seconds without access to clean water. That adds up to more than 16 million women every year being exposed to preventable, life-threatening infections during one of the most vulnerable moments of their lives.
It is a statistic that is difficult to comprehend until it becomes human.
Through photography, filmed interviews and digital storytelling spanning 13 countries, including Ethiopia, Malawi, Ghana, the UK, Japan, Canada and Australia, WaterAid is doing exactly that: turning data into lived experience, and lived experience into a call for change.
The campaign was launched to mark the International Day of the Midwife, but its message extends far beyond any single date. It asks a simple but powerful question: what does it mean to give birth safely, and why is that still not a guarantee?
At the heart of Time to Deliver is a striking visual comparison. Mothers from around the world are invited to share what they pack in their hospital bags, revealing both the universality of childbirth and the deep inequality that surrounds it.
There is something deeply familiar in those bags. Tiny baby clothes. Soft blankets. Personal care items. A water bottle, perhaps. The small, hopeful essentials of preparing to meet a new life.
But in some parts of the world, the contents tell a very different story.
In the most under-resourced health care settings, women are forced to pack items that most Australians would never imagine needing in a hospital delivery room: buckets to collect water, razor blades to cut umbilical cords, plastic sheets for protection, and basic disinfectants like bleach and soap. Not as optional extras, but as essential tools for survival.
It is a stark reminder that, while motherhood is universal, the conditions in which it unfolds are not.
In contrast, Australian maternity bags reflect a very different expectation: that clean water will be available on tap, that hands will be washed, that equipment will be sterilised, and that hospitals will be safe spaces for both mother and child.
This expectation is not luxury. It is infrastructure. And yet, for millions of women, it simply does not exist.
Globally, the absence of clean water, sanitation and hygiene in healthcare facilities exposes more than 16 million women annually to infections, complications and preventable deaths. In some health centres, midwives are unable to wash their hands before delivering babies. In others, basic equipment cannot be properly sterilised. One in five healthcare facilities globally lacks even the most essential hygiene services.
The consequences are devastating, but also entirely preventable.
WaterAid Australia CEO Tom Muller puts it plainly: access to clean water, sanitation and hygiene is not optional in maternal healthcare. It is fundamental. Without it, safe childbirth becomes a matter of chance rather than a guaranteed standard of care.
Across Australia, the campaign is being amplified by health advocates and digital creators, including paediatrician Dr Golly and media personality Tully Smyth, who are helping bring attention to the issue and encouraging the public to engage with WaterAid’s global petition. That petition calls on governments to urgently invest in clean water and sanitation in healthcare facilities ahead of the UN Water Conference in December.
But the campaign is not just about policy or infrastructure. It is also about perspective.
Because when you look closely at what is missing, you begin to see what we often take for granted. The simple act of turning on a tap. The ability to wash your hands before holding a newborn. The expectation that a hospital will be a place of safety, not risk.
It is easy to assume these things are universal. Time to Deliver challenges that assumption.
And it does so through storytelling that is deeply human. Mothers sharing what they carry. Healthcare workers describing the conditions they work in. Visual contrasts that do not rely on shock, but on quiet truth. The kind that lingers.
What emerges is not just a portrait of inequality, but a shared thread of humanity. Across continents and cultures, the anticipation of birth looks remarkably similar. The hope, the preparation, the emotional weight of bringing a child into the world. That universality is powerful. It is also what makes the disparity so difficult to ignore.
WaterAid’s work over decades has shown that change is possible. Millions of people have already gained access to clean water, toilets and hygiene services through community-led, systems-based solutions. But the gap remains vast, and the need urgent.
The organisation is calling on individuals and governments alike to act now, ahead of the UN Water Conference, to ensure that every maternal health facility has the basics required for safe birth: clean water, decent toilets and proper hygiene.
Because safe childbirth should not depend on geography. It should not depend on resources that are absent in one place and assumed in another. And it should never require a mother to pack survival tools alongside baby clothes.
At its core, Time to Deliver is a reminder that progress is not only measured in medical advancement or technological innovation, but in access. In dignity. In whether the most basic conditions for life are met at the very moment life begins.
And perhaps that is the most confronting truth of all: that something as simple as clean water is still not guaranteed for every mother, everywhere.
Change, however, is not out of reach. It begins with awareness. It builds through advocacy. And it is carried forward by every signature, every conversation, and every decision to refuse acceptance of a world where birth is unsafe simply because water is out of reach.
For mothers everywhere, the time to deliver is now.