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						Among babies and pregnant mothers, a 
						death every 11 seconds, says U.N.
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		[September 19, 2019]  
		LONDON (Reuters) - More women and newborns 
		survive now than ever before, largely thanks to better healthcare, 
		United Nations data showed on Thursday, but a baby or a pregnant woman 
		still dies every 11 seconds somewhere in the world. | 
        
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			 A report led by UN agencies UNICEF and the World Health Organization 
			(WHO), found that since 2000, child deaths have reduced by nearly 
			half and maternal deaths by more than a third, mostly due to 
			improved access to affordable, quality health services. 
 But the latest data also showed that 6.2 million children worldwide 
			died in 2018 before their 15th birthday, and more than 290,000 women 
			died due to complications during pregnancy and childbirth in 2017.
 
 Of the total child deaths, 5.3 million were among under fives, with 
			almost half of these in the first month of life.
 
			
			 
			"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," Henrietta Fore, UNICEF's executive director, said in the 
			report.
 She urged governments and health leaders to invest in health 
			services to "do all it takes ... to save these precious lives".
 
			
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			The data showed vast inequalities between regions, with women and 
			children in sub-Saharan Africa running a far higher risk of early 
			death than elsewhere.
 Levels of maternal deaths are nearly 50 times higher for women in 
			sub-Saharan Africa than in wealthy countries, and their babies are 
			10 times more likely to die in their first month of life, the report 
			found.
 
 Since 1990, however, there has been a 56% drop in deaths of children 
			under 15, from 14.2 million a year to 6.2 million in 2018, it added. 
			Countries in eastern and south-eastern Asia have made the most 
			progress, with an 80% fall in under-five deaths.
 
 (Reporting by Kate Kelland, editing by Giles Elgood)
 
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