By Zephania Ubwani
Summary
·
Mortality
rates for the kids have dropped to 43 per 1,000 live births in 2022 from 147
per 1,000 births in 1999
Arusha. Cost effective measures in treatment have significantly lowered child mortality rates in Tanzania.
This follows adoption of the generic
material for training health workers on Integrated Management of Childhood
Illness (IMCI), it was revealed here on Tuesday.
IMCI is an integrated approach that
aims at reducing preventable mortality, minimize illness and disability of
children under five years of age. A senior official of the Ministry of Health
said the integrated approach has lowered the kids’ mortality rates to amazing
levels in Tanzania.
“Tanzania is among the countries that have
reduced child mortality rates by over two thirds,” said Dr Felix Bundala, the
assistant director for child Health in the ministry of Health.
The mortality rates for the kids
have dropped to 43 per 1,000 live births in 2022 from 147 per 1,000 births in
1999.
The success follows swift adoption
of generic material for IMCI distance learning (d-IMCI) recommended by the
World Health Organization (WHO). Initially, training of nurses, medical
attendants, clinical officers and medical doctors for the exercise would cost
as much as $1,000 per person.
With distance learning (d-IMCI), the
cost has significantly gone down, he told health experts from 17 African
countries.
“The d-IMCI reduced the cost of
training by around 70 percent. This has accelerated efforts to scale up the
programme,” he said.
According to Dr Bundala, between
2013 and 2018 over 7,000 providers from over 3,000 health facilities in 101 out
of 185 Councils had been trained.
Tanzania has reduced under five
mortality rates because of good coverage of cost-effective interventions like
immunizations. The falling deaths are evident in the Demographic Health Survey
and Malaria Indicator Survey report of 2021-2023.
“There is a significant decline for
under-fives deaths, from 67 per 1,000 live births in 2015/16 to 43 in 2021/22.
“However only a slight decline in
neonatal deaths is noticed from 25 per 1,000 live births in 2015/16 to 24 in
2021/22,” he said.
The medical specialist listed
pneumonia, malaria, diarrhoea as among the six child killer diseases.
Diarrhoea alone is responsible for
nearly 20 percent of all under five deaths, but receives considerably less
development assistance as compared to HIV, Malaria and Tuberculosis.
“It is only through IMCI where
Pneumonia and Diarrhoea are captured. And therefore, it remains to be a
priority intervention,” he pointed out.
He added that Tanzania has achieved
80 percent coverage for IMCI roll-out in many districts that are covered.
However, he said, ending preventable
child deaths required increased investment in primary health care interventions
for children.
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