75% 50% 25% Source: Calculated based on data from the UNICEF/WHO/The World Bank/UN Pop Div. Levels and Trends in Child Mortality Report 2014

Advertisement
Similar documents
68 3,676, making progress

SRI LANKA SRI LANKA 187

150 7,114, making progress

117 4,904, making progress

MATARA. Geographic location 4 ( ) Distribution of population by wealth quintiles (%), Source: DHS

The Challenge of Appropriate Pneumonia Case Management and the Impact for Child Health

Objectives. What is undernutrition? What is undernutrition? What does undernutrition look like?

Infant Mortality and Maternal Mortality in Lao PDR

SUMMARY TABLE OF FINDINGS Sudan Household Health Survey (SHHS) and Millennium Development Goals (MDG) indicators, Sudan, 2006

MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH

WHO Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data. World health statistics 2015.

MDG 4: Reduce Child Mortality

Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey

INDICATOR REGION WORLD

cambodia Maternal, Newborn AND Child Health and Nutrition

INDICATOR REGION WORLD

Title: Determinants of full child immunization among months old in Nigeria Long abstract Morbidity and mortality in children are mainly due to

EVERY MONGOLIAN CHILD HAS THE RIGHT ÒO HEALTHY GROWTH

THE INDIA NEWBORN ACTION PLAN

66% Breastfeeding. Early initiation of breastfeeding (within one hour of birth) Exclusive breastfeeding rate (4-5 months)

Maternal and Neonatal Health in Bangladesh

The Situation of Children and Women in Iraq

Population and Development in Jamaica with reference to the MDGS

Module 7 Expanded Programme of Immunization (EPI)

Afghanistan May 2008

Lao People s Democratic Republic

Global Action Plan for Prevention and Control of Pneumonia (GAPP)

Liberia. Reproductive Health. at a. April Country Context. Liberia: MDG 5 Status

Population, Health, and Human Well-Being-- Benin

IMMUNIZATION OF CHILDREN

Children in Egypt 2014 A STATISTICAL DIGEST

PAKISTAN. Socio-Economic Differences in Health, Nutrition, and Population

SUMMARY- REPORT on CAUSES of DEATH: in INDIA

Nigeria s Health Statistics and Trends

Guyana 2009 Guyana Demographic and Health Survey Demographic and Health Survey 2009

MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH 9

Liberia Demographic and Health Survey Key Findings

EVERY NEWBORN SPOTLIGHT ON

Philippines: PCV Introduction and Experience. Dr. Enrique A. Tayag Assistant Secretary Department of Health Philippines

Child Survival and Equity: A Global Overview

The National Survey of Children s Health The Child

Part 4 Burden of disease: DALYs

Home visits for the newborn child: a strategy to improve survival

Central African Republic Country brief and funding request February 2015

Brief Overview of MIRA Channel (Women Mobile Lifeline Channel)

INFANT FEEDING AND CHILDREN S AND WOMEN S NUTRITIONAL STATUS 11.1 BREASTFEEDING

Testimony of Henry B. Perry, MD, PhD, MPH Senior Associate, Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

UN H4. Joint Country Support for Accelerated Implementation of Reproductive, Maternal and Newborn Care

World Health Statistics I Indicator compendium

Success Factors. for Women s and Children s Health. Cambodia. Ministry of Health, Cambodia

Table of Contents... ii. List of Figures... iii. List of Tables Acronyms... v. Foreword... vii. Acknowledgements... ix. Executive Summary...

Ending Preventable Child Deaths from Pneumonia and Diarrhoea by 2025

Goal 1: Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger. 1. Proportion of population below $1 (PPP) per day a

Pre-service and In-service Capacity Building: Lessons Learned from Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI)

HEALTH TRANSITION AND ECONOMIC GROWTH IN SRI LANKA LESSONS OF THE PAST AND EMERGING ISSUES

World Health Day Diabetes and RMNCAH in Africa: R for Reproductive Health

Cape Verde. Factsheets of Health Statistics 2010

Maternal, Infant, Child Health Report:

Social Marketing and Breastfeeding

CHILD HEALTH POLICY AND PLAN

Economic and Social Council

UNICEF Perspectives on Integrated Community Case Mangement (iccm) scale up across Africa

Care of babies born too soon and the role of KMC

Each year, millions of women, newborns,

Child and Maternal Nutrition in Bangladesh

WHO/UNICEF Regional Child Survival Strategy

Maternal & Child Mortality and Total Fertility Rates. Sample Registration System (SRS) Office of Registrar General, India 7th July 2011

Sierra Leone Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey Final Report

NO MORE MISSED MDG4 OPPORTUNITIES: OPTIMIZING EXISTING HEALTH PLATFORMS FOR CHILD SURVIVAL. Polio Campaigns

CAUSES OF DEATH IN CHILDREN UNDER FIVE YEARS OF AGE

Unit Overview: Child Survival: A Global Challenge 25

Maternal and child health in nepal: scaling up priority health care services * A. Morgan,

Demand Generation to Scale up ORS + Zinc in India Preliminary Market Analysis

Public health functions to be exercised by NHS England. Variation to the agreement

Zambia Demographic and Health Survey

SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA. Economic indicators. Demographic indicators. Survival HIV/AIDS. Health and nutrition. Child protection. Education.

UNICEF in South Africa

CORRELATIONAL ANALYSIS BETWEEN TEENAGE PREGNANCY AND MATERNAL MORTALITY IN MALAWI

AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND FACTSHEET

UNICEF/NYHQ /Noorani

Caring for Vulnerable Babies: The reorganisation of neonatal services in England

World Vision: Focus on Health

Every newborn: a draft action plan to end preventable deaths

Connection with other policy areas and (How does it fit/support wider early years work and partnerships)

Jean Yan Chief Scientist Nursing and Midwifery WHO/Geneva FINE, Paris October 4-5,2006

TRACKING PROGRESS ON CHILD AND MATERNAL NUTRITION. A survival and development priority

Annex 1 Cadre definitions used in the project

Summary. Accessibility and utilisation of health services in Ghana 245

YOUNG LIVES STATISTICAL DATA ON THE STATUS OF CHILDREN AGED 0 4 IN SOUTH AFRICA

#WSD2015 Data Visualization Challenge

Determinants of under-five mortality in rural and urban Kenya

Toronto, ON February 12, 2015

Supporting Integrated Community Case Management (iccm)

MALARIA A MAJOR CAUSE OF CHILD DEATH AND POVERTY IN AFRICA

Questionnaire to the UN system and other intergovernmental organizations

Immunization Infrastructure: The Role of Section 317

The United States Global Health Initiative. Ethiopia Global Health Initiative Strategy

Kenya. Demographic and Health Survey

III CHAPTER 2. Antenatal Care. Ornella Lincetto, Seipati Mothebesoane-Anoh, Patricia Gomez, Stephen Munjanja

Review of Health and Health Service Improvements in Nepal

Advertisement
Transcription:

% of deaths % of deaths African Region Neonatal and Child Health Profile Department of Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health (MCA/WHO) Demographics and information system Health status indicators Under-five population (21) [1],676,89 Stillbirth rate per 1, total births (29) [2] Number of births (21) [1] 799,552 Neonatal mortality rate per 1, live births (21)[] 29. Birth registration coverage [2] 6 Number of neonatal deaths (21) [] 2,11 Coverage of vital registration on causes of deaths [2] - Infant mortality rate per 1, live births (21) [] Number of infant deaths (21) [] Under-five mortality rate (21) [] Number of under-five deaths (21) [] 52. 41,87 78.4 61,5 Sources: [1] United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. World Population Prospects: The 212 Revision ; [2] WHO (21): Global Health Observatory Data Repository ( still birth rate originally published in Consens et al, Lancet 211); [] UNICEF/WHO/The World Bank/UN Pop Div. Levels and Trends in Child Mortality. Report 214. 22. Under-five mortality: when, where, and why When: Distribution of under-five deaths by age-groups 62% 5 8% 5 8% 29% % -28 days of life 1-59 months Period of life -28 days of life 1-11 months 1-4 years of age Period of life Source: Calculated based on data from the UNICEF/WHO/The World Bank/UN Pop Div. Levels and Trends in Child Mortality Report 214 When: Distribution of neonatal deaths by day of life 5 4 2 1 1 2 Source: DHS 28 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 11 12 1 14 15 16 17 18 19 2 21 22 2 24 25 26 27 Days of life Source: DHS 28 Based on 9 neonatal deaths

Deaths per 1, live births Deaths per 1 live births Where: Geographic variations in under-five deaths 2 15 No Data Available 1 5 56 61 67 86 88 89 98 14 18 124 Greater Accra Eastern Western Ashanti Central Volta Upper West Brong-Ahafo Upper East Northern Why: Estimated* distribution of causes of neonatal and under-five deaths, 21 Post neonatal deaths (aged 1-59 months) Meningitis / encephaliti s, % Non communicabl e diseases, 9% Pertussis, 2% HIV-AIDS, 1% Measles, 1% Injuries, 7% No data Available Diarrheal diseases, 12% Other conditions, 15% Malaria, 2% Pneumonia, 18% Pneumonia, 6% Congenital anomalies, 9% Neonatal deaths (< 1 month) Other Tetanus, 1% Injuries, 1% conditions, 4% No data Available Sepsis and other infectious conditions, 19% Birth asphyxia & birth trauma, Prematurity, 1% Source: CHERG/WHO/UNICEF for distribution of causes of neonatal and under-five deaths (published in Liu et al, Lancet 214). Notes: These are estimated proportions of causes of death obtained from models with input data from available Vital Registration data and population-based studies (for detailed methods and list of references please refer to Liu et al, Lancet 212). These estimates are not necessarily the same as those from the Member State, which may use alternative methods of estimation of causes of death. All Member Sates have undergone an official country consultation on the CHERG etsimation (documents available upon request). Rate of progress toward MDG4 2 16 168 No Data Available 155 12 12 95 8 4 128 114 11 8 88 8 72 65 58 55 4 7 4 2 4 198 1985 199 1995 2 25 21 215 U5MR IMR NNMR Target for MDG4 Year Source: UNICEF/WHO/The World Bank/UN Pop Div. Levels and Trends in Child Mortality. Report 214. Note: These figures are computed by the UN agencies through the IGME and are not necessarily the official statistics of the Member State, which may use alternative methods of estimation of mortality. All Member States have undergone an official country consultation on these estimations.

Morbidity and Nutrition Percentage of children aged 6-59 months with anemia Percentage of children under-five with symptoms of ARI in the two weeks preceding the survey Percentage of children under-five with diarrhoea in the two weeks preceding the survey Percentage of children under-five with fever in the two weeks preceding the survey Percentage of babies with low birth weight (54 % of all births had a reported birth weight) Percentage of babies with low birth weight (as perceived by mothers - babies not weighted ) Percentage of children under-five stunted (-2SD) Percentage of children under-five wasted (-2SD) Percentage of children under-five underweight (-2SD) Percentage of children under-five overweight 57 1 19 11-1 2 6 Source: DHS 211 Notes: Stunting = children under age five that fall below minus two standard deviations from the median height- for- age of the NCHS/WHO standard Wasting = children under five that fall below minus two standard deviations from the median weight- fo-r height of the NCHS/WHO standard Underweight = children under age five that fall below minus two standard deviations from the median weight- for- age of the NCHS/WHO standard Overweight = children under age five that fall above plus two standard devliations from the median weight-for-height of the NCHS/WHO standard Trend in nutritional status 5 No Data Available 22% 2% 18% 1% 5% 6% Under-5s stunted (-2SD) Under-5s wasted (-2SD) Under 5s underweight (-2SD) 26 211 Source: MICS

Outcome Indicators Coverage of maternal, newborn and children under-five interventions along the continuum of care 1 8 6 4 87% 8% 55% 67% 68% 8% 46% 46% 84% 41% 56% 49% 9% 5% 2 ANC (at least 4 visits) IPT during ANC visit (any) Last birth protected against NNT Delivery at health facility Birth attended by a skilled provider PNC for mothers (<2 days of birth) Breastfeeding initiated within 1hr of birth Infants < 6 months exclusively breastfed Children 12-2 months fully vaccinated pneumonia taken to health pneumonia who received antibiotics diarrhea who received ORT Under-5s sleeping under ITN fever who received antimararials Trends in coverage of interventions for maternal and newborn 1 8 6 4 2 ANC (at least 4 visits) IPT during ANC visit (any) Last birth protected against NNT Delivery at health facility Birth attended by a skilled provider PNC for mothers (<2 days of birth) Breastfeeding initiated within 1hr of birth 26 211 Source: MICS Trends in coverage of interventions for infants and under-five 1 8 6 4 2 Infants < 6 months exclusively breastfed Children 12-2 months fully vaccinated pneumonia taken to health pneumonia who received antibiotics diarrhea who received ORT Under-5s sleeping under ITN fever who received antimararials 26 211 Source: MICS

Under 5 mortality rate Inequities Inequities in under-five mortality 15 1No Data Available Urban 5 Rural Highest Lowest Highest Lowest Place of residence Wealth quintile Mother's education Inequities in coverage of some interventions along the continuum of care by wealth quintile 1 8 6 4 No Data Available 2 Any ANC Skilled attendant at birth Delivery at health facility Breastfeeding initiated within 1hr of birth Highest Lowest Under-fives with diarrhea who received ORT Under-fives with pneumonia taken to health Notes: *Lowest=No education; Highest= Completed higher secondary+ Input Indicators National health policies 1 Policy on postnatal home visit within 24 hours after birth 1 New ORS formula and zinc management of diarrhoea 1 Community treatment of pneumonia with antibiotics 1 International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes 1 Availability of costed national implementation plan(s) for MNCH 2 - No Human resources and health expenditure Human Resources (26-21) and Infrastructure Physicians per 1, population Nurses & midwives per 1, population Community Health Workers per 1, population Hospital beds per 1, population (26-212) Health expenditure (212) 4 Per capita government expenditure on health at average exchange rate (US$) General government expenditure on health as % of total government expenditure Out-of-pocket expenditure as % of total expenditure on health Sources: 1 WHO Global Maternal Newborn Child and Adolescent Health policy Indicator Survey (21-14) http://www.who.int/maternal_child_adolescent/documents/countries/indicators/dashboards/en/ 2 WHO and UNICEF(212). Countdown to 215, Building a Future for Women and Children: The 214 Report The 21 update, Global Health Workforce Statistics, WHO, Geneva (http://www.who.int/hrh/statistics/hwfstats/). 1. 9. 1.9 9. 8 9.7 28.7 4 WHO (214). Global Health Expenditure Database (http://apps.who.int/nha/database/dataexplorerregime.aspx)