Call for more action to reduce newborn mortality
Call for more action to reduce newborn
mortality
The World Health Organization and Save the Children release most comprehensive newborn death estimates to date and call for more action to reduce newborn mortality
31 August, 2011 — Fewer newborns are dying
worldwide, but progress is too slow and Africa particularly
is being left further behind. These are the findings of a
new study published in the medical journal PLoS Medicine
today. The study covering 20 years and all 193 WHO Member
States was led by researchers from the World Health
Organization
(WHO), Save the Children and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. The estimates are based on more data than ever and extensive consultations with countries. The study shows detailed trends over time and forecasts potential future progress.
Newborn
deaths decreased from 4.6 million in 1990 to 3.3 million in
2009, but have fallen slightly faster since 2000. More
investment into health care for women and children in the
last decade when the United Nations Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs) were set, contributed to more rapid progress
for the survival of mothers (2.3% per year) and children
under the age of five (2.1% per year) than for newborns
(1.7% per year).
According to the new figures, newborn
deaths, that is deaths in the first four weeks of life
(neonatal period), today account for 41% of all child deaths
before the age of five. That share grew from 37% in 1990,
and is likely to increase further. The first week of life is
the riskiest week for newborns, and yet many countries are
only just beginning postnatal care programmes to reach
mothers and babies at this critical time.
Three causes
account for three quarters of neonatal deaths in the world:
preterm delivery (29%), asphyxia (23%) and severe
infections, such as sepsis and pneumonia (25%). Existing
interventions can prevent two-thirds or more of these deaths
if they reach those in need.
“Newborn survival is
being left behind despite well-documented, cost-effective
solutions to prevent these deaths,” says Dr. Flavia
Bustreo, WHO Assistant Director-General for Family, Women's
and Children's Health. “With four years to achieve the
Millennium Development Goals, more attention and action for
newborns is critical.”
Almost 99% of newborn deaths
occur in the developing world. The new study found that in
part because of their large populations, more than half of
these deaths now happen in just five large countries –
India, Nigeria, Pakistan, China and Democratic Republic of
the Congo. India alone has more than 900,000 newborn deaths
per year, nearly 28% of the global total. Nigeria, the
world’s seventh most populous country, now ranks second in
newborn deaths up from fifth in 1990. This is due to an
increase in the total number of births while the risk of
newborn death has decreased only slightly. In contrast,
because the number of births went down and the risk of
newborn death was cut in half (23 to 11 per 1000), China
moved from second place to fourth place.
With a
reduction of 1% per year, Africa has seen the slowest
progress of any region in the world.
Among the 15
countries with more than 39 neonatal deaths per 1000 live
births, 12 were from the WHO African Region (Angola,
Burundi, Chad, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic
of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau,
Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, and Sierra Leone) plus
Afghanistan, Pakistan and Somalia. At the current rate of
progress it would take the African continent more than 150
years to reach U.S. or U.K. newborn survival
levels.
Of the ten countries with a newborn mortality
reduction of more than two-thirds in these two decades,
eight were high income countries (Cyprus, Czech Republic,
Estonia, Greece, Luxembourg, Oman, San Marino, and
Singapore), and two were middle income countries (Maldives
and Serbia).
“This study shows in stark terms that
where babies are born dramatically influences their chances
of survival, and that especially in Africa far too many
mothers experience the heartbreak of losing their baby,”
said co-author Dr. Joy Lawn of Save the Children’s Saving
Newborn Lives program. “Millions of babies should not be
dying when there are proven, cost-effective interventions
to prevent the leading causes of newborn death.”
In New Zealand Save the Children’s EVERY ONE One Thing campaign www.do1thing.org.nz is helping to raise awareness and support for Save the Children’s global effort to save children’s lives.
-ends-