Paris (AFP) - The lives of three
million women and babies can be saved every year by 2025 for an annual
investment of about a dollar per head in better maternity care, researchers
said Tuesday.
About 8,000 newborn babies die
and another 7,000 are stillborn every day -- 2.9 million and 2.6 million per
year respectively, according to a review of data from 195 countries published
in The Lancet medical journal.
Most of the deaths are avoidable.
"There is an urgent, unmet
need to provide timely, high-quality care for both mother and baby around the
time of birth," said study co-author Joy Lawn of the Centre for Maternal
Reproductive and Child Health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
"Each year, one million
babies die on their birth day -- their only day. Without greater investments to
improve birth outcomes, by 2035 there will be 116 million deaths" of
mothers, newborns and unborn infants.
About a quarter of a million
women worldwide die every year due to complications from carrying or delivering
a baby.
The annual cost of expanding
prenatal and birth care to 90 percent of women and babies in the world by 2025
would amount to some $5.65 billion (4.1 billion euros) by 2025, said the team
-- about $1.15 per person living in the 75 countries of the world with the
highest burden.
They calculated such expansion
could save the lives of 1.9 million newborns and 160,000 women, and prevent
820,000 stillbirths per year by 2025.
This would amount to just under
$2,000 spent per life saved -- which the researchers said amounted to a triple
to quadruple return on investment in terms of labour capital preserved and
other benefits.
Proper care involves prenatal
examinations, assistance at birth, adequate nutrition after delivery, promotion
of breastfeeding, infection control, as well as access to medicine, skilled
midwives and nurses and timely specialist care.
Half of the world's newborn
deaths occurred in five countries: India (779,000), Nigeria (276,000), Pakistan
(202,400), China (157,000) and the Democratic Republic of Congo (118,000), the
study said.
It would be more than 110 years
before a baby born in Africa has the same chances of survival as one …
"A preterm baby is at least 11
times more likely to die if born in Africa than in Europe or North
America," said the researchers.
On current trends, it would be
more than 110 years before a baby born in Africa has the same chances of
survival as one born in North America or Europe.
The researchers said stillbirths
were an "invisible" problem -- as most never got a birth or death
certificate and were not factored into targets for reducing infant deaths.
Many newborns also were never
documented.
"This fatalism, lack of
attention, and lack of investment are the reasons behind lagging progress in
reducing newborn deaths -- and even slower for progress in reducing
stillbirths," said Lawn.
"In reality, these deaths
are nearly all preventable."
The UN is targeting a two-thirds
reduction of under-five mortality between 1990 and 2015.
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