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Child deaths in Pakistan down by 5.1 million a year: UN report

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Child deaths in Pakistan down by 5.1 million a year: UN report
By APP
Published: September 14, 2012
UNITED NATIONS: Although the pace of child deaths has declined sharply in recent decades with an estimated 6.9 million children dying before their fifth birthday in 2011, compared to around 12 million in 1990 greater gains must be made to meet international goals to save infants and young children, according to a UN report released on Thursday.
“Proven solutions need to be expanded to accelerate progress on child survival faster and farther,” according to a news release on the latest annual report of the UN Inter-agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation (UN-IGME).
Formed in 2004, the UN-IGME is made up of the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the World Health Organisation (WHO), the Population Division of the UN Department of Development and Social Affairs (DESA) and the World Bank.
Its activities include sharing data on child mortality and improving methods for child mortality estimation reporting on progress towards achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), a set of eight goals agreed upon by world leaders in 2000 to slash extreme poverty and other global ills.
The UN-IGME said that gains in child survival, although significant, are still insufficient to achieve the fourth MDG, which calls for reducing the global under-five mortality rate by two-thirds between 1990 and 2015.
Only six of the world’s 10 regions are on track to reach the target. Worldwide, an estimated 19,000 children still died every day in 2011, with around 40 per cent in the first month of life and most from preventable causes. The report calls for systematic action to reduce neonatal mortality.
“Highly cost-effective interventions are feasible even at the community level,” stated UN-IGME, which advocates expanding preventative and curative interventions that target the main causes of infant mortality. Globally, it notes, the leading causes of death among children under five are pneumonia, pre-term birth complications, diarrhea, complications during birth and malaria.
Reporting on progress, the report says that rates of child mortality have fallen in all regions of the world in the last two decades – down by at least 50 per cent in Eastern Asia, Northern Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, South-eastern Asia and Western Asia. Between 2000 and 2011, the annual rate of reduction in the global under-five mortality rate jumped to 3.2 per cent, up from 1.8 per cent in 1990-2000.
Sub-Saharan Africa, the region with the greatest challenge in child survival, has doubled its rate of reduction, from 1.5 per cent per year in the years 1990-2010, to 3.1 per cent in the period from 2000-2011. However, the report cautions, Sub-Saharan Africa and Southern Asia still account for more than 80 per cent of global under-five deaths.
Their disparity with other regions is becoming more marked as regions such as Eastern Asia and Northern Africa have cut child deaths by more than two thirds since 1990, it notes. Half of all under-five deaths occurred in five countries: India, Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Pakistan and China, according to the report, which also finds that India and Nigeria account for more than a third of all under-five deaths worldwide.
Child deaths in Pakistan down by 5.1 million a year: UN report – The Express Tribune
 
Its sad so many innocent Children die in India and Nigeria. I hope both thier goverments does something about this issue
 
The figure is for the whole world not just Pakistan. Does the newspaper even read their own article before printing them?? It says 6.9
million children dying
before their fifth birthday
in 2011, compared to
around 12 million in 1990. does that mean 6900000 children die every year in Pakistan, or about 19000 per day?

This article does not talk or praise Pakistan in any way. Its child mortality rate is the worst in South Asia

Its sad so many innocent Children die in India and Nigeria. I hope both thier goverments does something about this issue
Please have a look of child mortality rate of India and Pakistan whenever you have some time, and then you will have to edit your comment
 
Its sad so many innocent Children die in India and Nigeria. I hope both thier goverments does something about this issue

253024_449882095055797_834775973_n.jpg
 
Its sad so many innocent Children die in India and Nigeria. I hope both thier goverments does something about this issue


Refer authentic websites to compare the data.
 
Seems like Icewolf collects his data from the mullas in his areas :lol:
Uff...and then his usual hollow chest thumping !!
 
Years ago in a communications class (required...or you know I wouldn't have taken it)...one of the problems we were given was UN reports on infant mortality...(people use them as a straight across comparison...but the standards of reporting differ from nation to nation...does a still-born count? Or only those that die after living awhile...etc. ). We were tasked with finding a way to accurately compare using all info available.
 
Indian under-fives the most vulnerable in the world
New Delhi, Sep 13, 2012, (IANS):

Despite the government's efforts to improve maternal and child health, the latest report released by UNICEF shows India had the highest number of deaths of children under five years of age in 2011.

World Health Organisation (WHO) India Representative Nata Menabde, however, says that given the size of the population, absolute numbers will always be high in case of India. This should not overshadow the fact that the country has made significant progress in the field of health.

The UNICEF report, released Thursday in New York, says almost 19,000 children less than five years of age die every day across the world. India tops the list of countries for 2011, with the highest number of such deaths at 16.55 lakh.

As per the report, even as overall child mortality in the world has gone down, under-five deaths are increasingly concentrated in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. In 2011, 82 percent of under-five deaths occurred in these two regions, up from 68 percent in 1990.

In 2011, about half of global under-five deaths occurred in just five countries: India, Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Pakistan and China. Though on the top of list in terms of absolute numbers, in terms of child mortality rate, India ranks 49th with 61 deaths per thousand children in 2011. Sierra Leone has the highest child mortality rate of 185 per thousand.

"There has been lot of improvement in last couple of years, with interventions like the National Rural Health Mission. In most areas, India will hopefully come close to the MDGs (Millennium Development Goals)," Menabde said at a press conference here.

The MDGs are eight international development goals that all member states of the UN agreed to achieve by 2015. One of the MDGs is to reduce under-five mortality rate of 42 per 1,000 live births by 2015.

According to projections by WHO, India will reach 52 percent by that year, missing the target by 10 percentage points.

"India may not achieve the MDG, but will come close to the target. It is important to maintain the pace even after the time period of the MDGs, so that the projections can be achieved," Menabde said.

According to the UNICEF report, China reported 2.49 lakh deaths of under-5 children last year, followed by 1.94 lakh by Ethiopia and 1.34 lakh each by Indonesia and Bangladesh.

Uganda with 1.31 lakh such deaths and Afghanistan with 1.28 lakh deaths held the ninth and 10th position in the list of 10 top countries reporting under-five children deaths.

On the positive side, however, the report shows that the overall number of under-five deaths worldwide has decreased from nearly 12 million in 1990 to less than 7 million in 2011, and the rate of the decline has been steadily increasing.

"The rate of decline in under-five mortality has drastically accelerated in the last decade - from 1.8 percent per year during the 1990s to 3.2 percent per year between 2000 and 2011," the report says.

Indian under-fives the most vulnerable in the world
 
Its sad so many innocent Children die in India and Nigeria. I hope both thier goverments does something about this issue

I hope our govt come up with zero child death report before any of my countrymen point fingers at others.
 

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