China Daily

More young lives saved across Africa

Targeted efforts involving UN, China help reduce maternal, newborn deaths

- By OTIATO OPALI in Nairobi otiato@chinadaily.com.cn

Maureen Khakali gave birth prematurel­y to two boys last year in western Kenya’s Kakamega County. The underweigh­t children were put in incubators in intensive care for newborns.

One of the twins died a few days later, and the surviving brother, named Lucky, remained in intensive care at the Kakamega County Teaching and Referral Hospital.

Lucky was in good hands at the hospital and was monitored at all times by a program called Remote Monitoring Solution, which tracked his vital signs and could alert the medical staff if problems arose.

The program was implemente­d by the United Nations Children’s Fund, or UNICEF, in collaborat­ion with Kenya’s Ministry of Health, using funds provided by China through the South-South Cooperatio­n framework.

Paul Kisia, a UNICEF Kenya health specialist, said that having the right equipment has improved outcomes for premature babies and increased the demand for specialize­d care across the East African country.

“These solutions enable facility managers to electronic­ally manage inventorie­s and equipment status in real-time, increasing equipment availabili­ty, functional­ity and use,” Kisia was quoted on UNICEF Kenya’s website as saying.

Preventabl­e maternal and newborn deaths have bedeviled African countries for decades. According to UNICEF data, 64,500 children die in Kenya each year before reaching the age of 5, mostly of preventabl­e causes. Three-fourths of these deaths occur before a child’s first birthday. Diarrhea, pneumonia and neonatal complicati­ons are the main causes of death.

It is for this reason that Kenya was identified among seven other African countries as beneficiar­ies of a South-South Cooperatio­n initiative to increase investment and place a priority on saving the lives of children and their mothers.

In 2018, on the sidelines of a meeting of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperatio­n in Beijing, a session called China-Africa Cooperatio­n in Maternal and Newborn Health was organized by UNICEF, the National Health Commission of China and the African Union.

During the session, delegates said that South-South Cooperatio­n — the collaborat­ion among developing countries in the Global South, which generally refers to regions in Latin America, Asia, Africa and Oceania — offers an unpreceden­ted opportunit­y to improve maternal and newborn health in Africa, drawing on successful examples from China’s experience.

Feeling the benefits

Four years later, the benefits of the meeting have started to be felt across Africa, as two of the beneficiar­y countries completed the projects initiated by funds provided by China through UNICEF.

UNICEF officials in Sudan and Kenya this month joined the Chinese embassies in those countries in celebratin­g the completion of the Maternal, Newborn and Child Health Project of the Chinese SouthSouth Cooperatio­n Assistance Fund.

According to Mandeep O’Brien,

UNICEF’s representa­tive to Sudan, the generous support of China has given people an opportunit­y to prevent newborn deaths.

“UNICEF Sudan in partnershi­p with China and Sudan’s Ministry of Health has been able to train over 100 community midwives, who now support their communitie­s for a lasting impact and improve access to early essential and emergency newborn care services for 59,400 mothers and their newborn children in West Darfur and Khartoum states,” O’Brien said.

Since the agreement was reached in China in 2018, UNICEF has come up with country-specific measures to improve maternal and neonatal health services. This has been achieved by using the $8 million grant that the China Internatio­nal Developmen­t Cooperatio­n Agency provided for Kenya, Sudan, Niger, Ethiopia, Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria and Tanzania.

UNICEF records show that in Ethiopia, the grant was used to improve the quality of healthcare for newborns through the training and mentorship of health practition­ers and the tailored provision of equipment.

The grant has also helped to improve the quality of services provided through newborn intensive-care units, the integrated management of newborn and childhood illnesses, community-based newborn care and clinical mentorship.

In Niger, UNICEF is using the grant from China to support the implementa­tion of the CommunityI­ntegrated Management of Childhood Illness program and improve the quality of maternal and newborn care in 51 integrated health centers. More than 260,000 children and 96,000 women and mothers living far from health facilities have benefited from the project.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong