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Save the Children's new Child
Survival Progress Report Card ranks Bangladesh
3,
Nepal 4 and India
10 among 60 developing countries in reducing child mortality since 1990. Pakistan ranks 17, while Afghanistan ranks 39.In a separate set of
rankings measuring
the well-being of mothers and children in 140 countries
worldwide, Save the Children has Sweden
as No. 1 (the best place in the world to be a mother), while Niger comes last.The ranking
includes 60 developing
countries, which together account for 94 percent of all child deaths worldwide.
The rankings indicate which countries are succeeding and which are failing to
save the lives of
children under the age of 5 years.The rankings are part of
the 8th annual State of the
World's Mothers report, released by Save the Children US. Among the developingcountries, Bangladesh and Nepal
are making great strides in child survival despite limited financial resources.
These countries have invested in better health care for mothers, better
nutrition for
children, and lifesaving health care services to prevent and
treat deadly diseases. The report credits Nepal-despite
having a GNI of only $1,530 and being mired in conflict-for having
reduced its
under-5 death rate by almost half in the past 15 years. Increasing immunization
coverage and vitamin A supplementation among young children are key to this
success. InBangladesh,
46 percent more infants live to see their 1st birthday, while the
child mortality rate is down by 51 percent. In recent decades, Bangladesh
has boosted girls' school
enrollment rates, improved the quality of education
for girls and promoted family planning. In 2005, Bangladesh was one of only a
handful of least developed countries to have achieved gender parity in
primary
education, where nearly every child, boy and girl alike, was enrolled in
primary school. Similarly, at 47 percent, Bangladesh has the highest
percentage of women using contraception of any
least developed country. These
pioneering efforts have led Bangladeshi couples to choose smaller, healthier
families. While progress has been
made in some countries in South Asia, muchremains to be done. Among the report's major
findings:
About half (40
percent, or 2 in 5)of deaths among children under 5 years,
occur in the
first month of life. (Note: it's 4 million outof 10.1 million)
Nearly half of
all children under age 5 are suffering from moderate or severe malnutrition in
Bangladesh, India
and Nepal.
One
child in 4 does not reach his or her 5th birthday in Afghanistan.
Nearly40 percent of all
Afghan
children are malnourished. This is largely due to the armed conflict and
social instability in the country.
274,000 Bangladeshi children
never see their fifth birthday. Less than
15 percent of deliveries are attended
by skilled health personnel.
The
majority of child deaths occur in just 10 countries of the world, many with
large populations such as India.Child deaths in India
in 2005 wereestimated to be 1,919,000, representing nearly 20 percent
of all under-five deaths in the world.
Nearly
90percent of births in
Nepal
are not attended by skilled personnel, placing both mother and newborn at
greater risk of death.
In Pakistan,
rural births are fives times less likely to be assisted
by skilled health
personnel. Approximately 473,000 Pakistani children die before they turn 5
years old.
The report also features the 8th annual Mothers' Index,
ranking the
best and worst places to be a mother around the globe. In South
Asia, India stands at 61st
in the developing world, while Afghanistan
ties with Niger
for last out of 164 countries.The report also notes the
three biggest killers of children under 5 years worldwide - newborn disorders,
pneumonia and diarrhoea. By using existing interventions, we can save more than
6 million of
the 10.1 million children who die every year from easily
preventable or treatable causes. There are many inexpensive solutions that
have the greatest potential to save lives such as vaccines, oral
rehydration therapy (ORT) and
insecticide-treated mosquito nets. Save
the Children notes that it is ultimately a question of political will and social
commitment than a matter of national
wealth as the countries in South Asia show.For more information, contact:Neha Bhandari
Regional Communication OfficerSave the Children Sweden, Regional Office for South and Central Asia
+977 985 103 4154
nehab@sca.savethechildren.se Notes to the
editor:
The publication can be accessed at www.savethechildren.org. Pictures and interviews can be made available on request.
Save the Children is
one of the
world's oldest and largest independent organisation for children, making a
difference to children's lives in over 110 countries. Established in 1919 by
Eglantyne Jebb, she was
the first to press for worldwide safeguards for
children. The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, adopted by the United
Nations in 1989 and now ratified by nearly all countries worldwide, has
its
roots in her pioneering work. From emergency relief to long-term development,
Save the Children helps children to achieve a happy, healthy and secure
childhood. Save the Children listens to
children, involves children and ensures
their views are taken into account. Save the Children secures and protects
children's rights - to food, shelter, health care, education and freedom fromviolence, abuse and exploitation.
[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]
REFILE - CORRECTING DATE Children wait for relief after a tropical storm damaged their house in Mubarak village, some 55 km (34 miles) from Karachi June 26, 2007. A cyclone hit the coast of Pakistan on Tuesday killing several people, cutting roads and stranding hundreds, but it spared the country's biggest city days after 230 people were killed there in a storm.