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SOUTHERN
AFRICA: HIV/AIDS remains a big child killer
IRIN News
October 08, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=43573
JOHANNESBURG - HIV/AIDS
remains one of the main causes of child mortality globally, with Botswana,
Zimbabwe and Swaziland recording the second, third and fourth fastest
increases in under-five deaths in the world, according to a UN Children's
Fund (UNICEF) report released on Friday.
The three Southern African countries also have the world's highest national
HIV prevalence rates - about 37 percent (Botswana), 25 percent (Zimbabwe)
and 39 percent (Swaziland). The under-five mortality rate in Botswana
increased from 58 per 1,000 live births in 1990 to 110 in 2002, in Zimbabwe
from 80 per 1,000 in 1990 to 123 in 2002, and in Swaziland from 110 per
1,000 in 1990 to 149 in 2002. Efforts in these countries will need to
almost triple.
The UNICEF report, 'Progress for Children', is a global progress report
card on achieving a two-thirds reduction in under-five mortality rates
between 1990 and 2015.
South Africa and Zambia also featured among the countries where the number
children who did not live to the age of five had increased since 1990.
"The world has the tools to improve child survival, if only it would use
them, said UNICEF's executive director, Carol Bellamy, at the release
of the report in New York. "Vaccines, micronutrient supplements and insecticide-treated
mosquito nets do not cost much, and would save millions of children ...
No government should be allowed to let another ten years pass with so
little progress for children."
According to the report, 91 developing countries were still lagging behind
the target. Poor neonatal conditions, followed by infectious and parasitic
diseases, acute respiratory infections and diarrhoea were the main causes
of death. Malaria accounted for more deaths than HIV/AIDS, and malnutrition
contributed to more than half of all child deaths worldwide, said the
World Health Organisation.
Angola's high child mortality rate had stagnated, the report noted. One
in four Angolan children died before their fifth birthday - malaria, acute
respiratory disease, diarrhoea, measles and unclean water were the biggest
child killers.
"Greatly improved nutrition and the strengthening of routine immunisation
in peacetime Angola are providing the foundations for better child health
systems," said UNICEF's representative in Angola, Mario Ferrari. "These
initiatives will now be consolidated and expanded by ministry of health
and UNICEF 'Child Health Days', which will engage communities and offer
a package of health services. We are on the right path, but after 27 years
of destructive war, the road is long and requires continued international
assistance."
The number of under-five deaths in other Southern African countries -
Mozambique, Madagascar, Namibia, Mauritius, Malawi and Lesotho - had dropped,
but their child mortality rates were still higher than the required rate.
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