Mothers and their babies wait for vaccination at the Nyamata Health
Center in Bugasera, Rwanda. The country remains the safest country for
mothers and their newborns in East Africa, a report by Unicef indicates.
FILE PHOTO | NATION
Rwanda remains the safest country for mothers and their newborns
in East Africa, a report by the United Nations International Children’s
Emergency Fund indicates.
Unicef said Rwanda’s success
in reducing child mortality rate in the country by half lies in its
political will to invest in health systems that prioritise newborns and
reaching out to the poorest and most marginalised.
For
every 1,000 babies born in 2016, for example, the report states, 16 died
before the end of their first month. This is a major improvement from
41 deaths per 1,000 births in 1990.
According to the Unicef report titled Every child alive, the urgent need to end newborn deaths, Uganda
was the second best country after recording 21 deaths, followed by
Tanzania, with 22 children dying per 1,000 births before their first
month.
For every 1,000 babies born in Kenya in 2016, 23 died before their first month.
But
the region still has countries with the highest newborn mortality
rates, such as South Sudan. For every 1,000 babies born in South Sudan
in 2016, 38 died before the end of their first month.
Worldwide, Pakistan was ranked as the riskiest place for a child
to be born where for every 1,000 babies born in 2016, 46 died before
the end of their first month.
Out of the 10 countries with the highest newborn mortality rates, eight are in sub-Saharan Africa while two are in South Asia.
The
report considered the eight countries as fragile states where crises,
including conflict, natural disasters, instability and poor governance,
have often impaired health systems.
The report listed
primary causes of newborn deaths as prematurity, complications around
the time of birth and infections such as sepsis, meningitis and
pneumonia.
“More than 80 per cent of the newborns who
died in 2016, the deaths were caused by preventable and treatable
diseases. They require a system-wide approach,” the report says.
Training
According to the
report, countries like Rwanda offer hope and lessons to others committed
to keeping every child alive by increasing access to affordable
healthcare and improving the quality of the care.
To
achieve quality care and improve outcomes, the report suggests that
doctors, nurses and midwives must have the training, resources and
incentives to provide timely, effective and treatment for every mother
and every child.
Unicef is calling for universal health
coverage, starting with four main pillars including functional health
facilities, with electricity and clean water, midwives and other health
workers equipped with training and tools, life-saving drugs and
equipment.
The care must start during pregnancy, birth
and the first days and weeks of life. A child’s birth and the 28 days
that follow are the most dangerous period of her life. Almost half of
all under-five children who died in 2016 were newborns.
“Take
action, we believe that a future where every child is born to thrive is
not only possible but necessary. Together with you, we will work to
make this a reality,” reads the report.
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