Saturday Star

Good news for South Africa

The country has reason to celebrate decline in child mortality rate

- SANJAY WIJESEKERA @Sanjaywash Wijesekera, representa­tive, Unicef SA

NEW MORTALITY estimates released by Unicef, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), the United Nations Population Division and the World Bank Group, in South Africa, indicate that the under-five mortality rate declined by 53% over the last seven years – going from 78 deaths per 1 000 live births in 2000 to 37 deaths per 1000 live births last year.

South Africa made much faster progress in reducing under-five mortality between 2000 and 2017 than it did in the 1990s. These figures are encouragin­g as the country is among 84 others that made particular­ly solid progress since the year 2000.

This achievemen­t will add momentum to the effort to end preventabl­e child deaths and achieve the healthrela­ted Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDG ) particular­ly Goal 3 which talks of reducing under five mortality to less than 25 per 1000 live births by 2030.

In addition to the decline over the years, South Africa has already achieved the SDG target of a neonatal mortality rate of 12 deaths or fewer per 1 000 live births, and based on current trends, would achieve the SDG target on under-five mortality by 2030.

The trend in South Africa goes hand in hand with the events around the world as fewer children are dying each year. Across the world, the number of children under five who have died from diseases that are deemed to have been preventabl­e has declined dramatical­ly from the 12.6million in 1990 to 5.4 million last year.

Even with these steady achievemen­ts we cannot be complacent. There is still much to be done. This is because an estimated 43000 children under five died in this country. Up to 13000 of these children were newborns. The neonatal mortality rate has in particular remained stubbornly stagnant over the last few years.

The vast majority of newborn deaths result from complicati­ons due to prematurit­y, birth complicati­ons including lack of oxygen at birth (asphyxia), and neonatal infections – preventabl­e and treatable conditions.

These deaths are inextricab­ly linked to the health and nutrition of the mother and to the care she receives in the antenatal period, in labour and delivery, and immediatel­y after that in the postpartum period.

Achieving the ambitious child survival goals requires an understand­ing of the levels and trends in child mortality, systematic­ally gathering data and evidence on what works and what doesn’t and making sure that these lessons from experience­s can be applied at scale.

Beyond achieving the SDG target, efforts to reduce inequity in mortality within the country should be intensifie­d. To further accelerate progress, we must end all preventabl­e child deaths, we need a new emphasis on districts and communitie­s where child mortality is increasing­ly concentrat­ed, as well as the multiple deprivatio­ns and comorbidit­ies that contribute to preventabl­e child deaths.

South Africa, as a high-hiv prevalence country where hard-won gains in child survival were undermined by the spread of HIV and Aids in the 1990s and early 2000s, needs to be vigilant and continue prevention efforts.

Achieving the ambitious child survival goals also requires ensuring universal health coverage. The most strategic route to achieving universal health coverage is to invest in primary health care as an effective platform for the delivery of integrated services through robust, well-resourced health systems that respond to local contexts and needs and which reach down to the community level. As government­s and health ministers from around the world will congregate in Astana, Kazakhstan, on October 25 and 26 to create a renewed commitment to primary health care, universal health coverage and the SDGS targets for health, now is the time to call for progress on ending preventabl­e child deaths.

Ending preventabl­e newborn and child deaths is no fantasy. In fact, it is achievable in our lifetimes. Dramatic progress has been made over the past two decades. But we are failing the youngest citizens on the planet, and with millions of young lives at stake, time is of the essence. We must all commit to giving every child a fair chance at the start of life.

Unicef’s Every Child Alive campaign is an urgent appeal to government­s, businesses, health-care providers, communitie­s and individual­s to fulfil the promise of universal health coverage and keep every child alive.

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