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Child MortalityThe world is home to 2.2 billion children. Children in developing countries face often deadly complications in their early years as a result of poor healthcare. Child Mortality is the number of children who die by the age of five out of every thousand live births. Malnutrition, malaria, diarrhoea and pneumonia are some of the major causes of death and everyday struggles children face in the developing world. The UN stated in 2007 that children in developing countries are thirteen times more likely to die in the first five years of life than those in developed countries. About 25,000 young children die every day, mainly from preventable causes.
Child mortality is closely linked to poverty. Advances in infant and child survival have come more slowly in poor countries and also to the poorest people in wealthier countries. Improvements in public health services are essential, including safe water and better sanitation. Education, especially for girls and mothers, will also save children's lives. Improvements in income help, but little will be achieved unless a greater effort is made to ensure that services to improve child health reach those who need them most.
In 2007, 9.2 million children born alive across the world died before their fifth birthday, a total of 1 in 61. Most of these children lived in developing countries and died from a disease or a combination of diseases that could easily have been prevented or treated; for example, pneumonia can be treated with antibiotics and diarrhoea can be treated with a simple mix of water, salt and sugar. Malnutrition contributes to over a third of these deaths.
Despite a 21% decrease overall in the developing world between 1990 and 2006, malnutrition affects 26% of children under five (and as much as 46% in Southern Asia). The cause of a third of under-five deaths, malnutrition makes it very difficult for a child to fend off disease. Millennium Development Goal 4: Reduce CHILD MORTALITY
The global rate to be reached by 2015 is 31 per 1,000 live births. Close to 60 per cent of countries have already reduced child mortality to this level. Most countries (130) are on track to achieve MDG 4, but we are still faced by many challenges.
What are we doing?
Through community outreach, supervision, training, and data collection and monitoring, massive immunisation campaigns have reached vast numbers of children. Immunisation is critically important to the developing world as preventable diseases have an enormous impact on many communities. UNICEF has helped Afghanistan, India, Nepal and Pakistan train female volunteers to administer polio vaccines and promote immunisation against maternal and child tetanus.
Case Study: Malawi
A Global Poverty Project volunteer recently arrived back from a six month stay in Africa. This following story is from Malawi in eastern Africa.
“Because of whom he is, and he has HIV.”
Malawi's Ambassador to the United States Talks About Health Care Improvements in Malawi
Hawa Ndilowe, Malawi's ambassador to the United States explains the efforts that the country has undertaken to decrease child mortality rates. Ambassador Ndilowe remains hopeful that Malawi will get a handle on child mortality by having a National Health plan and a clear direction and knowing what is required. Ndilowe says, “What is important is to know the problem and address it.”
INTERESTING LINKS: http://www.wfp.org/hunger/millennium-development-goals http://www.unicef.org/childsurvival/index.html
1. UNICEF. (2007[a]). The State of the World’s Children 2008. New York: United Nations Children’s Fund. 2. ibid
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