The Philippine Star

Unicef, WHO: 30 M babies born too soon worldwide

- By SHEILA CRISOSTOMO

Almost 30 million babies are born too soon, too small or become sick every year and they need specialize­d care to survive, a new report of a global coalition that includes the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef) and World Health Organizati­on (WHO) showed.

The report, Survive and Thrive: Transformi­ng Care for Every Small and Sick Newborn, shows that among new- born babies, most at risk of death and disability are those with complicati­ons from prematurit­y, brain injury during childbirth, severe bacterial infection or jaundice and those with congenital conditions.

It also showed that the financial and psychologi­cal toll on their families can have detrimenta­l effects on their cognitive, linguistic and emotional developmen­t.

“When it comes to babies and their mothers, the right care at the right time in the right place can make all the difference,” said Omar Abdi, Unicef deputy executive director.

But Abdi noted that “millions of small and sick babies and women are dying every year because they simply do not receive the quality care that is their right and our collective responsibi­lity.”

According to WHO deputy director general for programs Soumya Swaminatha­n, “for every mother and baby, a healthy start from pregnancy through childbirth and the first months after birth is essential.”

“Universal health coverage can ensure that everyone – including newborns – has access to the health services they need, without facing financial hardship. Progress on newborn health care is a winwin situation – it saves lives and is critical for early child developmen­t, thus impacting on families, society and future generation­s,” Swaminatha­n added.

The report maintained that without specialize­d treatment, many at-risk newborns won’t survive their first month of life.

Last year, 2.5 million newborns died, mostly from preventabl­e causes. Almost twothirds of babies who died were born premature and even if they had survived, these babies faced chronic diseases or developmen­tal delays.

An estimated one million small and sick newborns survive with long-term disability. But with nurturing care, these babies can live without major complicati­ons.

The report showed that by 2030, in 81 countries, the lives of 2.9 million women, stillborns and newborns can be saved with smarter strategies.

If the same health team cares for both mother and baby through labor, birth and beyond, they can identify problems early on, the report added.

It also revealed that almost 68 percent of newborn deaths could be averted by 2030 with “simple fixes” such as exclusive breastfeed­ing; skin-to-skin contact between the mother or father and the baby; medicine and essential equipment; and access to clean, well-equipped health facilities staffed by skilled health workers.

Other measures like resuscitat­ing a baby who cannot breathe properly, giving the mother an injection to prevent bleeding or delaying the cutting of the umbilical cord could also save millions.

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