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Child mortality in the world: a historic low level in 2022, according to the UN

2024-03-13T08:52:21.210Z

Highlights: The mortality of children under 5 years old fell to a historic low in 2022, finally falling below 5 million. But this “precarious” progress is still far from being enough, according to the UN. In total, 162 million children under the age of 5 have died since 2000, including 72 million in the first month after birth. Complications linked to birth (premature babies, asphyxia, congenital anomalies, etc.) remain one of the main causes of child mortality.


According to a joint report from Unicef, WHO and the World Bank, this “progress” on infant mortality remains “precarious”


The situation is improving, but not enough.

The mortality of children under 5 years old fell to a historic low in 2022, finally falling below 5 million, but this “precarious” progress is still far from being enough, according to the UN.

“There is good news, and the most important is that we have reached a historic record for under-5 mortality, which has fallen below 5 million for the first time: to 4.9 million,” says the AFP Helga Fogstad, head of health issues at Unicef, in charge of this report in cooperation with the World Health Organization (WHO) or the World Bank.

New findings show that annual deaths of children under age 5 reached a historic low in 2022.



While progress has been made, the battle to end preventable child deaths continues - with 4.9 million children lost in 2022 and millions more at risk without urgent action.

— UNICEF (@UNICEF) March 13, 2024

This new estimate of 4.9 million in 2022 represents a drop of 51% since 2000 and 62% since 1990. Figures which, like every year, are accompanied by a certain margin of error.

Progress is particularly notable in a few developing countries (Malawi, Rwanda, Democratic Republic of Congo, Cambodia and Mongolia), where infant mortality has fallen by more than 75% since 2000.

“Progress risks stagnating or even reversing”

“Behind these figures, there are the stories of midwives and qualified health workers who help mothers give birth safely (…), who vaccinate and protect children against deadly diseases” or who go “at home » to ensure the good health and nutrition of children, commented the head of Unicef, Catherine Russell, in a press release.

“But it’s a precarious success.

Progress risks stagnating or even reversing unless efforts are made to counter the many threats to the health and survival of newborns and children,” the report warns.

Worrying signs are already there.

Thus, at the global level and in certain regions, notably sub-Saharan Africa, progress “slowed down”: between 2000 and 2015, the decline in global infant mortality was twice as rapid as for the period 2015-2022.

Also read: Infant mortality: why it is falling everywhere in Europe… but not in France

In total, 162 million children under the age of 5 have died since 2000, including 72 million in the first month after birth.

Complications linked to birth (premature babies, asphyxia, congenital anomalies, etc.) remain one of the main causes of child mortality, with 2.3 million deaths in their first month in 2022. Between one month and 5 years, respiratory infections (especially pneumonia), malaria and diarrhea are the main killers.

All these deaths are particularly unbearable because they are premature and “avoidable”, underlines the report.

Necessary investments

But without urgent investments in child health, 59 countries will not meet the UN target of reducing child mortality to 25 deaths per 1,000 births in 2030, and 64 will not reach the target specifically linked to deaths during of the first month (12 per 1,000).

“These are not just numbers on a page, they represent lives cut short.

If current trends continue, 35 million children will die before their fifth birthday between now and 2030,” the report insists.

Also read: The worrying increase in infant mortality in Île-de-France

Progress also masks gaping inequalities across the world, with sub-Saharan Africa accounting for more than half of all children under 5 who will die in 2022. A child born in one of the countries with the highest infant mortality rate ( Chad, Niger, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Somalia, with more than 100 deaths before the age of 5 per 1,000 births) is 80 times more likely to die before turning 5 than a child born in one of the best-off countries (Estonia, Finland, Japan, Norway, Singapore, San Marino, Slovenia, Sweden, with less than 2.5 per 1,000).

“The place where a child is born should not determine whether he lives or dies,” said WHO boss Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

“It is essential to improve access to quality health services for every woman and child, including during emergencies and in isolated settings.”

Source: leparis

All life articles on 2024-03-13

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