Getting the health services you need: newborns and children under 5 years
Updated: 30 September 2022

Manuela Leporesi
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Credits
Tips and information
- Register the birth of a child with the appropriate service
- Follow the advice of a health worker after a baby is born
- Register a child for health services
- Find out from a health worker when immunizations are due
- Ask a health worker about any supplements children might need to stay healthy
- Ask a health worker how to avoid infectious diseases, such as HIV, malaria and TB if there is a risk in the area
- Contact a health worker as soon as possible if worried about a child’s health or development
- Ask about support for children who have a disability or who have special needs
- See a health worker as soon as possible if a child has any danger signs such as not eating or drinking enough, or they are less active than usual
Related tips and information
Related rights
Videos & infographics
All →Publications
All →Risk stratification analyses for programmes and research in newborn and child health, Meeting report, Geneva, Switzerland, 12-14 March 2024
Guidance on planning, implementing and scaling up task sharing for contraceptive services
Digital adaptation kit for birth defects surveillance: operational requirements for implementing WHO recommendations in digital systems
Report of the tenth meeting of the WHO Strategic and Technical Advisory Group of Experts for Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health and Nutrition, 12–14 Nov 2024
Reports
All →World Health Day 2025 Toolkit
BRANCH (Breastfeeding counselling and management of growth faltering) trial
The WHO PROPS Trial (PRObiotics in Preterm and Small for gestational age infants)
WHA Agenda Item 11.7 - Accelerate progress towards reducing maternal, newborn and child mortality in order to achieve SDG targets 3.1 and 3.2
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