Wednesday, July 2, 2025
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
Ecobuild.club
  • Home
  • Sustainability
  • Insulation
  • Energy Efficiency
  • Eco Build
  • Green Energy
  • Natural Global Resources
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Ecobuild.club
Home Sustainability

Despite progress in childbirth safety, one woman or baby dies every 11 seconds

20th September 2019
in Sustainability
0
Despite progress in childbirth safety, one woman or baby dies every 11 seconds
0
SHARES
14
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Related posts

Human rights can be a ‘strong lever for progress’ in climate change, says UN rights chief

2nd July 2025

LIVE: World leaders in Sevilla launch ambitious push to finance the future

2nd July 2025

In a joint appeal for all nations to do more to provide better medical care for all, the World Health Organization (WHO) and the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) outlined several ways to help protect the 2.8 million pregnant women and newborns who die every year.

A skilled pair of hands to help mothers and newborns around the time of birth, along with clean water, adequate nutrition, basic medicines and vaccines, can make the difference between life and death. #EveryChildALIVE https://t.co/H3cKi5QgFz

— Henrietta H. Fore (@unicefchief) September 19, 2019

Their recommendations tackle immediate and underlying problems, such as ensuring that midwives have water to wash their hands and helping teenage girls to stay in school longer, where there is less chance of them getting pregnant.

In addition, communities should have access to cheap medicines, such as oral rehydration salts used to treat diarrhoea, and “ten cent vaccines” to keep tuberculosis at bay, the UN agencies insisted.

Citing 2018 data showing that newborns – babies in their first month – accounted for around half of the 5.3 million deaths among under-fives, WHO and UNICEF also highlighted the need for other structural changes.

These include ensuring that pregnant mothers eat a sufficiently nutritious diet to stave off illnesses linked to malnutrition.

Sub-Saharan babies, 10 times more likely to die

All of these things “can make the difference between life and death”, said UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore, in a statement accompanying new data showing that in sub-Saharan Africa, women in childbirth are nearly 50 times more likely to die, than in richer regions, and their babies are 10 times more likely to perish in their first month.

According to 2018 figures, one in 13 children in sub-Saharan Africa also died before their fifth birthday, which is 15 times more than in Europe, where the rate is one in 196.

Beyond sub-Saharan Africa, the joint WHO/UNICEF report also expressed concern about high mother and baby mortality rates linked to poverty in Southern Asia.

Taken together, both regions account for around eight in 10 of all maternal and child deaths, highlighting vast inequalities in healthcare worldwide.

Going to Sweden ‘can reduce mother’s chances of dying by 100’

“If I look to my own native country, Sweden (a woman) who travels from the highest mortality regions to the world to Sweden, she reduces her overall mortality rate by 100”, UNICEF’s Chief of Health, Dr Stefan Peterson, told journalists in Geneva.

Under global healthcare targets agreed by the international community in 2015 as part of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 2030 Agenda, Goal 3.2 calls for fewer than 70 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births by 2030.

“The world will fall short of this target by more than one million lives if the current pace of progress continues”, the agencies warned.

Another SDG target (3.2) urges countries to reduce deaths of babies in their first month of life, to at least 12 per 1,000 live births, and to bring down mortality among under-fives, to at least 25 per 1,000 live births.

In 2018, 121 countries had already achieved this under-five mortality rate, according to WHO, while among the remaining 74 States, 53 will need to accelerate progress to reach the SDG target on child survival by 2030.

UN Inter-agency Group for Child/Maternal Mortality Estimation (IGME)

Under-five mortality rate (deaths per 1,000 live births) by country, 2018.

$200 billion needed to achieve healthcare targets

Some $200 billion a year is needed to achieve all the primary health goals that are required for quality universal health coverage for all, according to Dr Peter Salama, Executive Director in charge of Universal Healthcare targets at WHO.

Welcoming the many positive changes in tackling child and maternal mortality globally since 2000, Dr Salama insisted that many countries were in a position to achieve much more, without having to find new funding.

“The biggest difference in terms of when we discuss financing between the MDG (Millennium Development Goals) era (2000-2015) and the SDG era, is the real acknowledgement that the money is there for many countries, they just have to spend it on the right things,” he said.

“So we’re not turning to the donor community and saying, ‘Give us $200 billion.’ We’re turning to middle-income and higher-income and even some lower-income countries that are stable and saying, ‘Actually, if you choose the right things, you could meet these goals within your current budgets.’”

‘Staggering success’ in reducing deaths

Since 2000, Dr. Salama insisted, the overall story of maternal and child mortality had been “a staggering success that we don’t often see in global and health development”.

He pointed to a 50 per cent reduction in deaths in children under 15 years old – from 14.2 million in 2000 to 6.2 million deaths in 2018 – and a 35 per cent reduction in maternal deaths over the same period.


Source link

Previous Post

Top 5 Wonderful Eco-Friendly Gardening Ideas

Next Post

Insulated Slab using Insulated Concrete Forms

Next Post
Insulated Slab using Insulated Concrete Forms

Insulated Slab using Insulated Concrete Forms

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RECOMMENDED NEWS

Media Advisory | FFD4: Opening Press Conference

4 days ago

DR Congo: New initiative to eliminate HIV in children ‘a beacon of hope’

3 days ago

Energy access has improved, but more funding is needed to address disparities: WHO

6 days ago

Every hour, 100 people die of loneliness-related causes, UN health agency reports

11 hours ago

POPULAR NEWS

  • Ahead of UN summit, countries finalise landmark ‘Compromiso de Sevilla’

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • 7 Most Sustainable Guitar Woods & The Brands Using Them

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Every hour, 100 people die of loneliness-related causes, UN health agency reports

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Human rights can be a ‘strong lever for progress’ in climate change, says UN rights chief

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • LIVE: World leaders in Sevilla launch ambitious push to finance the future

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
Ecobuild.club

ecobuild.club is an online news portal which aims to provide knowledge about Sustainability, Insulation, Energy Efficiency, Eco Build, Green Energy & Natural Global Resources.

Follow us on social media:

Recent News

  • Human rights can be a ‘strong lever for progress’ in climate change, says UN rights chief
  • LIVE: World leaders in Sevilla launch ambitious push to finance the future
  • It’s time to finance our future and ‘change course’, Guterres tells world leaders in Sevilla

Category

  • Eco Build
  • Energy Efficiency
  • Green Energy
  • Insulation
  • Natural Global Resources
  • Sustainability
  • Videos

Subscribe to get more!

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy

© 2018 EcoBuild.club - All about Eco Friendly Environment !

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Sustainability
  • Insulation
  • Energy Efficiency
  • Eco Build
  • Green Energy
  • Natural Global Resources
  • Videos

© 2018 EcoBuild.club - All about Eco Friendly Environment !