It is possible for a mother to die after childbirth but that's only like 1 every 200 mothers so if a mother is willing to fight for her life she'll be fine.
but no women dies during the childbirth only after.
This is the maternal mortality rate and it varies widely between countries. In developed countries (United States, United Kingdom, Japan, Germany, France, etc.) the rate is pretty low - less than 10 maternal deaths per 1,000 births. In developing countries (think sub-Saharan Africa, rural South American and Asia) the rate can be fairly high, over 100 deaths per 1,000 births.
This information is regularly published by the World Health Organization, so for specific values by country that is relatively recent I would suggest you check them out (www dot who dot org).
This is the Infant Mortality Rate, and the numbers vary by country. In developed countries (United States, United Kingdom, Japan, Germany, France, etc.) the rate is pretty low, under 20 deaths per 1,000 live births. However, in developing countries (think sub-Saharan Africa, rural South American and rural Asia) the rate can be startlingly high, over 100 deaths per 1,000 live births.
you need some real help (not being rude) that's like asking what came first the chicken or the egg
Exactly correct. Mothers have a baby by giving birth
no !! the males seahorse does not die!
Yes a starfish does die after giving birth to baby starfishies.
Ofcourse, if you can die giving birth to a regular child, ofcourse you can giving concurrently to 4
Yes all spiders do die after giving birth like the charlottes web
The global maternal mortality rate is around 211 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births. This translates to approximately 830 women dying each day from complications related to pregnancy and childbirth.
YES many horses have died giving birth so has the foal
yes.
Yes naruto's mother died giving birth to him
Yes, you can die giving birth by losing too much blood.
Yes,some mothers die after giving birth.
They might die because they are too weak after giving all their nutrients to their litters.