Most of world’s child deaths occur in just 10 countries, and China is one of them
Sixty per cent of the 5.9 million children under five who died last year were in just 10 countries in Africa and Asia, an evaluation of global infant health revealed Friday.
Pneumonia was the leading killer in five of them, all in Africa: Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Nigeria and Tanzania, said a study published in The Lancet medical journal.
In Bangladesh, Indonesia, India and Pakistan, the main cause of death was preterm birth complications - also the global leader - while in China birth defects claimed most of the children who never made their fifth birthday.
“Accelerated investment in child survival is imperative,” to meet the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the authors wrote.
These targets include an under-five mortality rate of no more than 25 per 1,000 births in every country by 2030.
The worst-performing countries today lose more than 90 children under five per 1,000 live births, said the researchers, including Angola, Central African Republic, Chad, Mali, Nigeria, Sierra Leone and Somalia.