For Children & Youth

Know your rights

The Convention on the Rights of the Child

The African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child

Youth in action

 

Fast facts on children

Young child survival and development

Basic education and gender equality

Child protection

Children and AIDS

 

Young child survival and development

© UNICEF/NYHQ2008-1789/Pirozzi
A newborn lies in a hospital in the Zanzibar Archipelago, Tanzania.

While only accounting for 23 percent of the world’s annual births, half of all under-five deaths occur in Eastern and Southern Africa (ESA).

Of the 20 countries with the highest under-five mortality rate, all are in Sub-Saharan Africa, including four in Eastern and Southern Africa: Angola, Burundi, Somalia and South Sudan.

In ESAR, 1 in 6 children died before their fifth birthday in 1990; in 2011, this had dropped to 1 in 12. And under-five mortality has declined by 48 percent from 166 per 1,000 live births in 1990, to 84 per 1,000 live births in 2011.

However, high levels of fertility and birth rates coupled with high levels of child mortality in the region have led to a rather gradual decrease in the absolute number of child deaths from 1.66 million in 1990 to 1.18 million in 2011.

Among the top 10 high-mortality countries that have achieved the sharpest annual rate of reduction over the past two decades, eight are from ESA – Rwanda, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Lesotho, Kenya, Namibia, Swaziland and Tanzania.

Overall, there is not enough progress being made in the region to meet the Millennium Development Goal (MDG 4) of reducing child mortality by two thirds between 1990 and 2015. 

Around 43 percent of all deaths among children under five occur in the first month of life. The leading causes of young children dying are pneumonia, preterm birth complications, diarrohea, complications during birth and malaria.

Globally, more than a third of under-five deaths are attributable to under-nutrition.

 

 
Search:

 Email this article

unite for children
Search:

 Email this article

unite for children