Despite global commitments under SDG-3, maternal mortality rates remain disproportionately high in Sub-Saharan Africa. This review examines how health policies have shaped outcomes between 2014 and 2024 in Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa, and Gabon. A comparative narrative review was conducted using WHO, World Bank, UNFPA, DHS, and national policy documents. Guided by the Walt & Gilson Policy Triangle and the WHO Health System Building Blocks, policies were assessed for context, content, actors, process, and health system capacity. Data were synthesized thematically to compare implementation and outcomes. Rwanda achieved substantial declines through decentralized financing, performance-based funding, and community health worker integration. South Africa reduced deaths via integration of HIV and maternal services but still faces equity gaps. Gabon improved financial access but rural infrastructure and workforce limitations constrain outcomes. Nigeria’s fragmented governance and weak PHC financing explain stagnation despite multiple reforms. Implementation quality, not policy presence, drives progress. Strengthening governance, financing transparency, workforce readiness, and community engagement remains crucial for achieving SDG-3. This study highlights cross-country lessons transferable to similar contexts.
Kanu et al. (Thu,) studied this question.