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DROP IN WORLD CHILD MORTALITY REACHES TARGET, NEW
STUDY SHOWS BUT MANY COUNTRIES LAGGING
The global death toll in young
children has fallen dramatically in the past half-century and has even
dropped below the target set a decade ago by world leaders. But the
pace of decline has been slowing in recent years, and in some
countries the downward curve has levelled out or is even starting to
rise, according to a new study published in the latest issue of The
Bulletin of the World Health Organization.
A large
number of countries, the study shows, have still a long way to go to
reach the target.
"The slowdown is of particular concern in the
case of Africa and south-east Asia because it is occurring at
relatively high levels of mortality and in countries with severe
economic dislocations," the researchers write. "As the
HIV/AIDS epidemic continues to unfold in Africa and parts of Asia,
further reductions in child mortality will become increasingly
unlikely until substantial progress in controlling the spread of HIV
is achieved."
The study traces the dramatic fall of almost 60 per
cent in child mortality during the second half of the 20th
century. It shows that about 10.5 million children under five died
last year, 2.2 million less than in 1990. Of these 10.5 million
deaths, 3.8 million occurred in Africa, with a further 2.5 million in
India and 750,000 in China.
The fall in child mortality means a reduction in
the likelihood of a baby dying before its fifth birthday. Today, the
probability of a newborn baby dying before the age of five is,
globally, about 7%, compared with 10% in 1990, 12% in 1980 and 25% in
1950.
The drop in child mortality also brings the world’s
average rate down to an estimated 67 deaths per 1,000 live births. At
the World Summit for Children in New York in 1990, leaders of more
than 150 countries set a target of 70 deaths per 1,000 live births
that all countries of the world were to reach by the year 2000. At
that time the global rate averaged about 85 per 1000 live births,
already a striking drop from the 180 deaths per 1,000 live births in
1950.
At least 57 countries have not reached the 70 per
1,000 target, the Bulletin article points out. Some countries
have child mortality rates estimated to be above 200 per 1,000 live
births. They include, in order of descending rates, Niger (335),
Sierra Leone (312), Afghanistan (264), Malawi (219), Guinea and
Liberia (205), Guinea-Bissau (202) and Somalia (201). Seven of these
eight countries are in WHO’s African region, which has an average
rate of about 150, vs. 88 for South-East Asia, 67 for the Eastern
Mediterranean, 46 for the Western Pacific, 34 for the Americas and 18
for Europe.
What’s more, the pace of the decline in child
mortality is slowing. Seven countries, all in Africa, have seen little
or no change in their child mortality rates over the past 50 years.
They are Burundi, Lesotho, Madagascar, Mauritania, Nigeria, Sierra
Leone and Tanzania.
A further seven countries have even experienced
increases in child mortality: five in Africa-Botswana, Namibia, Niger,
Zambia and Zimbabwe; one in South-East Asia - Democratic People’s
Republic of Korea; and one in the Western Pacific - Papua New Guinea.
Africa as a whole recorded the most sluggish
decline in child mortality among the six WHO regions—42%, compared
with 60-72% for other regions. And in Africa, about 15% of newborns
are likely to die before reaching age five, compared to under 2% in
Europe.
The reasons for the slump are unclear but in some
countries, economic problems, civil strife and a poor choice of
interventions used to try to reduce deaths among children are among
the underlying factors. The authors of the study warn that the full
impact of the HIV/AIDS epidemic on child death rates has not yet been
felt. They say the disease has the potential to slow down
dramatically, if not reverse, gains in childhood survival in some
African and Asian countries.
"It is important," they add, "to
recognize that reversals in public health are possible and can
substantially alter long-term declines in mortality. Two examples are
the dramatic increase in adult mortality in Russia and several other
eastern European countries in the late 1980s-early 1990s, and the
emergence of HIV/AIDS as a leading cause of adult death (and the
leading cause in Africa)."
The authors of the study are Omar Ahmad, Alan Lopez
and Mie Inoue, of the Burden of Disease Unit of WHO’s Global
Programme on Evidence for Health Policy.
Not one but many magic bullets spur child survival
In an attempt to find out which factors might be
responsible for the declining child mortality rates that have been
observed in most countries over the past 50 years, Rutstein (pages
1256–1270) studied data from 89 health surveys conducted in 56
developing countries. The factors most strongly linked to declining
child mortality were better nutritional status and environmental
conditions (better water supply, sanitation and housing). Next came
greater availability of medical care during pregnancy, at birth and
for children with diarrhoea, followed by the availability of
electricity and education of mothers.
Fewer stunted children but not everywhere
Growth retardation, or stunting, is a direct
consequence of poor feeding and is associated with increased child
mortality. A new study by de Onis et al. (pages 1222–1233) found
that stunting in developing countries has dropped in prevalence from
47% in 1980 to 33% today and if these trends continue will fall to
about 29% by 2005. That means that there are some 182 million stunted
children in developing countries today, or 40 million fewer than two
decades ago. Of the 182 million, 70% live in Asia, 26% in Africa and
4% in Latin America and the Caribbean. A downward trend is seen for
all Regions, although Africa shows the smallest decline, down from 41%
to only 35%. In Eastern Africa, stunting has been on an upcurve since
1980 and today affects 48% of pre-school children, or 22 million, vs.
12.9 million 20 years ago.
Oral rehydration therapy, a likely lifesaver
Better nutrition is not the only reason for the
fall in child mortality over recent decades. Another, according to
data presented by Victora et al. (pages 1246–1255), could be the
increasingly widespread use of oral rehydration therapy (ORT) to
manage diarrhoeal disease. Over the past decade, the estimated number
of under-five-year-olds dying from diarrhoea fell precipitously—from
3.3 million to 1.5 million, a saving of 1.8 million young lives, while
deaths from all causes in this age-group fell by 2.2 million. Over the
same period, the proportion of diarrhoea episodes managed with ORT in
developing countries soared, from 40% to 69%.
For further information, please contact Thomson
Prentice, WHO, Geneva. Telephone (+41 22) 791 4224. Email : prenticet@who.int
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