UNICEF: Flere børn end nogensinde overlever de første 5 år

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    Executive Summary

    https://www.ft.dk/samling/20131/almdel/URU/bilag/257/1400009.pdf

    THIS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY IS UNDER EMBARGO UNTIL 12:01 GMT ON 16 SEPTEMBER 2014
    1
    Executive Summary
    Committing to Child Survival: A Promise
    Renewed 2014 Progress Report
    The promise: In 2000, the world made a promise to children: to reduce by two-thirds between 1990
    and 2015, the rate of under-five mortality. In 2012, world leaders renewed the promise. Since the
    global launch of Committing to Child Survival: A Promise Renewed in June 2012, nearly 180
    governments have pledged to scale up efforts to accelerate declines in preventable maternal,
    newborn and child deaths.
    An overview of child survival: good news and bad
    • Globally, major progress has been made in improving child survival. The under-five mortality
    rate has declined by almost half since 1990, dropping from 90 to 46 deaths per 1,000 live births
    in 2013. The absolute number of under-five deaths was cut in half during the same period, from
    12.7 million to 6.3 million, saving 17,000 lives every day.
    • The under-five mortality is falling faster than at any other time during the past two decades.
    Globally, the annual rate of reduction has more than tripled since the early 1990s. Eastern and
    Southern Africa currently has highest annual rate of reduction in the world with the exception of
    East Asia and the Pacific. Thanks to this accelerated progress, almost 100 million children have
    been saved over the past two decades – including 24 million newborns. These are babies who
    would have died had mortality remained at 1990 rates.
     Under-five mortality is falling among the poorest children in all regions. Moreover, greater
    gains have been made among the poorest households than among the richest in all regions
    except sub-Saharan Africa. Between 1990 and 2010, the gap between the richest and poorest
    households fell in all regions except sub-Saharan Africa. However, substantial disparities remain
    in all regions.
     But despite these advances, the toll of under-five deaths over the past two decades is
    staggering: between 1990 and 2013, 223 million children worldwide died before their fifth
    birthday.
     Progress is insufficient to meet MDG 4. If current trends continue in all countries, the target
    will only be reached globally by 2026, 11 years behind schedule.
    • Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, together account for 4 out of 5 under-five deaths globally.
    Sub-Saharan Africa continues to shoulder the greatest burden: 1 in 11 children born there still
    die before age 5, nearly 15 times the average in high-income countries (1 in 159). The recent
    momentum achieved in Sub-Saharan Africa needs to be sustained and accelerated.
    • Although child deaths from leading infectious diseases have declined significantly, pneumonia,
    diarrhoea and malaria are still the main killers of children. Pneumonia, diarrhoea or malaria
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    make up about one third of all under five deaths in 2013. Importantly, neonatal deaths account
    for 44% of all under-five deaths.
    The first month of life: the most vulnerable period
     The first 28 days of life – the neonatal period – is the most vulnerable time for a child’s
    survival. The good news is that neonatal mortality is declining globally. The worldwide
    neonatal mortality rate fell by 40 per cent between 1990 and 2013  from 33 to 20 deaths per
    1,000 live births.
     The lives of 24 million newborns have been saved since 1990. Yet despite the availability of
    effective, proven strategies to prevent newborn deaths, 2.8 million babies still died in the first
    month of life in 2013, largely of preventable causes. Neonatal health must be prioritized to
    sustain the rapid progress on overall child mortality.
     Mortality during the neonatal period is falling slower than during other age groups. As a result,
    the proportion of under-five deaths during the neonatal period has gone up in every region.
    Globally, it increased from 37 to 44 per cent between 1990 and 2013.
     For 1 million babies every year, their day of birth is also their day of death, accounting for
    more than a third of neonatal deaths. Close to 2 million newborns die in the first week of life.
    Investments in maternal care, specifically labour and delivery care and other high-impact
    interventions focused on the 24 hours around the time of birth, hold the greatest potential for
    reducing neonatal mortality.
     Many deaths in the first month of life result from diseases and conditions that are readily
    preventable or treatable with proven, cost-effective interventions. Globally, preterm birth
    complications and complications during labour and delivery (intrapartum-related complications)
    account for nearly 60 per cent of neonatal deaths. The focus clearly needs to be on preventing
    these deaths by providing high-quality care for both the mother and the baby around the time of
    birth.
     Educating women is crucial for reducing neonatal mortality. Neonatal mortality rates among
    mothers with no education are nearly twice as high as for mothers with secondary education or
    higher. The family’s wealth and geographic location (urban/rural) also remain powerful
    determinants of inequities in neonatal mortality.
     Some newborns are particularly vulnerable - those born to the youngest and oldest mothers,
    as well as mothers living in rural areas. Children born shortly after another sibling are also at
    greater risk of dying than those born after longer intervals between births. Therefore, ending
    child marriage, reducing adolescent pregnancy and extending birth intervals are crucial to
    reducing the risk of newborn mortality.
    The Promise: Reaching every newborn with quality care
     Too many mothers and newborns miss out on key interventions that can save their lives.
    Pregnant mothers and their babies require access to high-quality services along a continuum of
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    care from pregnancy through childbirth and the postnatal period. There is substantial variation
    in access to and use of these services and in the quality of care across countries.
     Newborns are most vulnerable during the first hours and days of life, yet this critical window
    of opportunity is being missed.
    o Evidence shows that initiating breastfeeding within one hour of birth reduces the risk of
    neonatal death by 44 per cent. Yet fewer than half of newborn babies (43 per cent)
    worldwide receive the benefits of immediate breastfeeding.
    o In the regions with the highest neonatal mortality rates, access to postnatal care is
    abysmally low. In the majority of countries with data in sub-Saharan African and South Asia,
    fewer than half of mothers and babies receive a postnatal health check.
     Complications during labour and delivery are responsible for approximately a quarter of all
    neonatal deaths worldwide. Yet in 2012, one in three babies  an estimated 44 million 
    entered the world without the help of a skilled health care provider, putting them at even
    greater risk during this most vulnerable time.
     Coverage of key maternal and newborn interventions is too low.
    o Only about half of women worldwide receive the recommended minimum of four antenatal
    care visits. Global progress has been modest since 1990, increasing on average only by 15
    percentage points, from 37 to 52 per cent of women.
    o One third of women globally deliver their baby without the help of a doctor, nurse or
    midwife. The global rate of women delivering with skilled attendance has risen by a mere 12
    percentage points since 1990– from 57 to 69 per cent.
     Quality of care is grossly lacking even for babies and mothers who have contact with the
    health system.
    o A 10 countries analysis suggests that less than 10 per cent of mothers who saw a skilled
    provider during pregnancy received a set of eight key interventions.
    o Similarly, less than 10 per cent of babies who were delivered by a skilled health professional
    went on to receive seven needed interventions, including early initiation of breastfeeding
    and postnatal care.
     In the least developed countries, women in the richest households are almost three times as
    likely to give birth with a skilled attendant as women in the poorest. The poorest are worst off
    in the countries with the lowest coverage. Not only are poor mothers and babies less likely to
    have contact with the health system, but when they do they are less likely to receive high-quality
    care.
     Globally, only 59 per cent of children under age 1 have had their birth registered at birth. In
    the high-mortality regions of South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, only about one third of
    infants are registered. Children must be registered at birth if they are to have assured access to
    services, such as to health care and education.
     Better data are needed to help guide programmes. Although information on use of basic
    services increased greatly over the past decade, more effort is needed to understand the quality
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    of care available to women across the continuum of pregnancy, delivery and the postnatal
    period. Expanding the availability and quality of population and health facility data must include
    a concerted effort to register every newborn and count the deaths of every mother and
    newborn, including stillbirths.
    Global commitment and priorities for action
     Since the global launch of A Promise Renewed in June 2012, nearly 180 governments have
    pledged to scale up efforts to accelerate declines in preventable maternal, newborn and
    child deaths.
     Under the banner of A Promise Renewed, nearly 20 of these are turning their pledges into
    practical action by sharpening national strategies for reproductive, maternal, newborn and
    child health, setting costed targets and monitoring progress. More countries need to do the
    same. By scaling-up progress for women and children, governments are positioning
    countries to close the gap on MDG 4 and sustain the progress well after 2015.
     With millions of women and children still at risk of dying of preventable causes, maternal,
    newborn and child survival must remain at the heart of the post-2015 global development
    agenda. The world cannot abandon its promise to women and children.
     Now is the time to scale-up progress. The Every Newborn Action Plan represents a global
    consensus on the actions that need to be taken to scale up progress on newborn survival.
    The world has the knowledge and solutions to save ever more women, newborns and
    children from dying of causes that are easily avoidable.
    

    Pressemeddelelse børnedødelighedstal 2014.doc

    https://www.ft.dk/samling/20131/almdel/URU/bilag/257/1400010.pdf

    PRESSEMEDDELELSE Den 16. september 2014
    KLAUSULERET TIL 16. SEPTEMBER KL. 13
    Flere børn end nogensinde overlever de første 5 år
    Dobbelt så mange børn overlevede i 2013 som i 1990, viser tal fra børneorganisationen UNICEF.
    Mens 12,7 mio. børn under fem år døde i 1990, gjaldt det 6,3 mio. børn i 2013. Det betyder, at der
    dagligt er 17.000 flere børn under fem år, som overlever.
    Det viser den årlige statusrapport ”Committing to Child Survival: A Promise Renewed” fra
    børneorganisationen UNICEF.
    ”Det er både opløftende og motiverende, at det går så meget fremad. Alle de kriser, vi ser i verden
    lige nu, giver et helt naturligt fokus på nødhjælp. De her tal viser bare, hvor vigtigt det er, at vi ikke
    dermed glemmer den langsigtede udvikling – det lange, seje træk, som sikrer, at børn overlever og
    får en sund, tryg barndom,” siger generalsekretær i UNICEF Danmark, Steen M. Andersen.
    Det er især indsatsen mod smitsomme sygdomme, der har båret frugt. For eksempel er antallet af
    børn, der dør af diarré, faldet med 54 % fra 2000 til 2013, og hele 80 % færre børn har mistet livet til
    mæslinger i samme tidsrum.
    ”UNICEF har hjulpet med at forbedre landenes sundhedssystemer, så flere har fået adgang til
    sundhedshjælp, også selvom de bor langt væk fra egentlige sundhedsklinikker. På den måde har vi
    kunnet forebygge og behandle dødelige sygdomme,” siger Steen M. Andersen.
    Trods de store fremskridt er det ikke muligt at nå FN’s 2015-mål om at reducere den globale
    børnedødelighed med to tredjedele. Hvis den nuværende udvikling fortsætter i alle lande, vil 2015-
    målet tværtimod først være nået i 2026.
    Der er især brug for at investere mere i bekæmpelse af spædbørnsdødelighed. For selvom stadig
    flere børn overlever den første kritiske tid efter fødslen, var spædbørnsdødelighed årsag til næsten
    halvdelen af de 6,3 millioner børn, der mistede livet i 2013. Én million af dem døde på den dag, de
    blev født.
    ”Det er rigtig godt, at børnedødeligheden falder. Det handler om, at udviklingen bider sig fast, når
    piger og kvinder får bedre adgang til uddannelse, sundhedsydelser og rent vand. Det kræver en
    ihærdig og vedvarende indsats. Men der er stadig alt for mange børn og især spædbørn, der dør.
    Derfor vil jeg næste uge i New York arbejde for at samle opbakning til, at FN i 2015 sætter nogle
    ambitiøse globale bæredygtighedsmål, der også adresserer disse udfordringer”, siger handels- og
    udviklingsminister Mogens Jensen.
    For yderligere oplysninger, venligst kontakt:
    Jakob Colville-Ebeling, kommunikationsmedarbejder, tlf. 61656195, Jebeling@unicef.dk
    Karin Aaen, informationschef, tlf. 25396099, kaaen@unicef.dk
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    - Over de sidste 23 år er næsten 100 millioner flere børns liv blevet reddet – heriblandt 24
    millioner spædbørn.
    - Totalt har 223 millioner børn siden 1990 mistet livet inden deres 5 års fødselsdag.
    - De hyppigste dødsårsager er lungebetændelse, malaria og diarré, som tilsammen er skyld i
    omkring en tredjedel af alle dødsfald blandt børn under 5 år.
    - 2,8 mio. børn døde i 2013 inden for den første måned af deres liv. Primære årsager er, at
    fødslen går for tidligt i gang, eller at der opstår komplikationer under fødslen.
    - For 1 million børn er den dag, de kommer til verden, også den dag, de dør – svarende til en
    tredjedel af alle dødsfald blandt spædbørn. Næsten 2 millioner nyfødte dør inden for den
    første uge.
    - 4 ud af 5 dødsfald blandt børn under 5 år finder sted i det sydlige Asien og landene syd for
    Sahara. Sidstnævnte bærer den tungeste byrde: Her dør 1 ud af 11 børn, der kommer til
    verden, inden for de første fem år af deres liv.
    - Omkring halvdelen af alle dødsfald blandt børn under 5 år hænger sammen med fejl- og
    underernæring.
    - Amning lige efter fødslen har vist sig at kunne reducere spædbørnsdødelighed med 44 %.
    Alligevel er det under halvdelen af alle nyfødte på verdensplan, der bliver lagt til brystet
    mindre end en time efter fødslen.
    Kilde: UNICEF, 2014