Covid-19: Pandemic threatens lives of millions of children, says UN

Covid-19: Pandemic threatens lives of millions of children, says UN

PARIS, Sept 9 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Disruptions to health services due to the
pandemic are putting millions of additional lives at risk worldwide, the
United Nations said Wednesday, warning that Covid-19 could reverse decades of progress in reducing child mortality.

The past 30 years have seen remarkable strides forward in preventing or
treating causes of infant deaths including premature births and pneumonia.

New mortality estimates published by the UN’s children’s fund UNICEF, the
World Health Organization and the World Bank Group found that 2019 saw the lowest number of global under-five deaths on record.

Last year around 5.2 million children died due to preventable illness,
compared with 12.5 million in 1990.

But it warned that the pandemic risked undoing all this by cutting routine
child and maternal health services.

A UNICEF survey across 77 countries found 68 percent reported at least
some disruption in child health checks and immunisations.

Henrietta Fore, UNICEF executive director, said that children and mothers
particularly in low- and middle-income countries were being denied access to healthcare as Covid-19 cases clog national infrastructure.

“The global community has come too far towards eliminating preventable
child deaths to allow the pandemic to stop us in our tracks,” she said.

“Without urgent investments to re-start disrupted health systems and
services, millions of children under five, especially newborns, could die.”

Neo-natal care in developing nations is relatively inexpensive and can
profoundly affect child survival rates.

For example, women who receive care by professional midwives are 16
percent less likely to lose their baby and 24 percent less likely to
experience pre-term birth, according to the WHO.

Modelling conducted earlier this year by Johns Hopkins University found that almost 6,000 additional children could die every single day if Covid-19 healthcare disruptions continue in the medium term.

The survey found that seven countries had child mortality rates of more
than 50 deaths in 1000 live births last year.

In Afghanistan, where 1 in 17 children die before their fifth birthday,
the ministry of health reported a “significant reduction” in visits to health
facilities, UNICEF said.

Much of the disruption may be down to fear of contracting Covid-19. But
there are profound risks for mothers and babies avoiding healthcare
facilities that have nothing to do with the coronavirus.

John Wilmoth, director of the Population Division of the UN Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, said that the report showed that the world had
made significant progress on reducing child mortality over the last 30 years.

“It also draws attention to the need to redress the vast inequities in a
child’s prospects for survival and good health,” he said. — NNN-AGENCIES

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