Global child mortality rates dropped in 2022 but progress slow, UN says
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[March 13, 2024]
LONDON (Reuters) - The number of children globally who died
before their fifth birthday dropped to a record low of 4.9 million in
2022, but that still represents one death every six seconds, according
to new United Nations estimates.
While the mortality rate for under-5s has roughly halved since 2000, the
world is still behind in the goal of reducing preventable deaths in that
age group by 2030, and progress has slowed since 2015, the report,
released on Wednesday, found.
The numbers represent "an important milestone", said Juan Pablo Uribe,
director for health nutrition and population at the World Bank, one of
the partners that put together the report alongside Unicef, the U.N.
population division and the World Health Organization.
"But this is simply not enough."
The picture is varied. Some countries, like Cambodia, Malawi and
Mongolia, have reduced under-5 mortality rates by more than 75% since
2000.
Overall, deaths in babies and children under-5 in 2022 were concentrated
in sub-Saharan Africa, which represented 57% of the global total despite
only making up 30% of the live births that year. Southern Asia had
around a quarter of both deaths and live births. Around half of the
deaths globally are among newborns, the report said.
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The United Nations headquarters building is pictured with a UN logo
in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S., March 1,
2022. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri/File Photo
The report was limited by a lack of
data in the worst-affected countries, the U.N. partners added.
The deaths were largely caused by preventable or treatable causes,
such as pre-term birth, pneumonia or diarrhea. Better access to
primary health care and community health workers could vastly
improve the outlook, the U.N. said, although climate change,
increasing inequity, conflict and the long-term fall-out of COVID-19
could all threaten progress.
(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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