بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم
A child or youth died once every 4.4
seconds in 2021
Dr. Jassim Taqui DG Al-Bab Institute for Strategic
Studies
Islamabad, 11 January 2023, An estimated 5 million children
died before their fifth birthday and another 2.1 million children and youth
aged between 5–24 years lost their lives in 2021, according to the latest
estimates released by the United Nations Inter-agency Group for Child Mortality
Estimation (UN IGME).
In a separate report also released today, the group found that 1.9
million babies were stillborn during the same period. Tragically, many of these
deaths could have been prevented with equitable access and high-quality
maternal, newborn, adolescent, and child health care.
“Every day, far too many parents are facing the trauma of losing their
children, sometimes even before their first breath,” said Vidhya Ganesh, UNICEF
Director of the Division of Data Analytics, Planning, and Monitoring. “Such
widespread, preventable tragedy should never be accepted as inevitable.
Progress is possible with stronger political will and targeted investment in
equitable access to primary health care for every woman and child.”
The reports show some positive outcomes with a lower risk of death
across all ages globally since 2000. The global under-five mortality rate fell
by 50 percent since the start of the century, while mortality rates in older
children and youth dropped by 36 percent, and the stillbirth rate decreased by
35 percent. This can be attributed to more investments in strengthening primary
health systems to benefit women, children, and young people.
However, gains have reduced
significantly since 2010, and 54 countries will fall short of meeting the
Sustainable Development Goals target for under-five mortality. If swift action
is not taken to improve health services, warn the agencies, almost 59 million
children and youth will die before 2030, and nearly 16 million babies will be
lost to stillbirth.
“It is grossly unjust that a child’s chances of survival can be shaped
just by their place of birth, and that there are such vast inequities in their
access to lifesaving health services,” said Dr. Anshu Banerjee, Director for
Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health and Ageing at the World Health
Organization (WHO). “Children everywhere need strong primary health care
systems that meet their needs and those of their families, so that – no matter
where they are born – they have the best start and hope for the future.”
Children continue to face wildly differentiating chances of survival
based on where they are born, with sub-Saharan Africa and Southern Asia
shouldering the heaviest burden, the reports show. Though sub-Saharan
Africa had just 29 percent of global live births, the region accounted for 56
percent of all under-five deaths in 2021, and Southern Asia for 26 percent of
the total. Children born in sub-Saharan Africa are subject to the highest
risk of childhood death in the world – 15 times higher than the risk for
children in Europe and Northern America.
Mothers in these two regions also endure the painful loss of babies to
stillbirth at an exceptional rate, with 77 percent of all stillbirths in 2021
occurring in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. Nearly half of all stillbirths
happened in sub-Saharan Africa. The risk of a woman having a stillborn baby in
sub-Saharan Africa is seven times more likely than in Europe and North America.
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