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Article
02 Июль 2020
Going for a vaccination with my cousin Emina
https://www.unicef.org/eca/stories/going-vaccination-my-cousin-emina
“Don’t worry, it doesn’t hurt, it just stings a little. It’s easier if you look the other way,” says Emina to Irma as they fix each other’s hair. This is an important day for Irma Fafulić, who has already prepared a clothing combination to wear and asks us to wait for her while she changes in another room. Both girls soon return to the living room of Irma’s humble home, dressed up and with their hair done to their liking, but now they are faced with another dilemma: they are not sure if their protective facemasks will match the rest of their outfits so they deliberate on which one to wear to the vaccination point. The atmosphere in the living room of the Fafulić family in the village of Varda near Kakanj is almost festive: they are visited by Edin Sejdić, mediator from the Kakanj-based Roma Support Centre “Romalen”. Six-year-old Emina and her mother Fatima Dedić from Visoko are currently visiting the Fafulić family, so the girls have been inseparable for days. “I call her sister even though we’re actually cousins, and I’m a little older than Emina,” says Irma with a smile full of crooked milk teeth and explains that she has completed her second grade online due to the COVID-19 situation. Now, she says, she is deservedly enjoying her school holidays after a very challenging period when she had to compete with other relatives for access to a single shared mobile device so that she could attend her online classes. When asked what she liked most about school this year, she retorts right off the bat: “My teacher Dženita!” The rest of the Fafulić-Dedić household listens attentively to Edin, whom they have known for a long time, and who has stopped by today to escort their Irma to the local health centre for a vaccination. Statistics show that only four percent of Roma children in BiH are vaccinated Roma girl UNICEF/ Majda Balić Raising awareness about the importance and effectiveness of immunization in Roma communities is one of the regular activities implemented by the Kakanj-based Roma Support Centre “Romalen” Edin is kind of a link between the health-care system and the residents of this small community, and as a true man of the people, he explains the advantages of immunization, dispelling misconceptions and rebutting arguments of even the most fervent opponents of vaccination in the audience. He is one of the 16 mediators trained to do outreach work and help Roma communities with vaccination procedures in four cantons with sizeable Roma population (Zenica-Doboj, Sarajevo, Central Bosnia and Tuzla). Raising awareness of the importance and effectiveness of immunization in Roma communities is one of the regular activities implemented by the Kakanj-based Roma Support Centre “Romalen” under the project Immunization for Every Child in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), in cooperation with UNICEF BiH. Edin is a link between the health-care system and the residents of this small community. Edin is a link between the health-care system and the residents of this small community. He admits that doing outreach work is not always easy, adding that people often confuse going to the doctor for an injection for receiving vaccines, and that there are still those who remain unconvinced of the benefits of immunization. But Edin has a way with people, patiently walking them through the entire process, emphasizing benefits and dispelling fears. By the end of the project, as many as almost 1500 families in the four cantons will have been informed about the benefits and effectiveness of immunization, as well as vaccination procedures and options. Mediators like Edin also provide assistance by escorting the youngest members of the community to vaccination points. “Thanks to this project, you can also retroactively receive the vaccines you missed,” says Edin, adding that many Roma are not at all aware of what needs to be done, or when. Mediators are therefore an invaluable asset to the community as they motivate, inform and mobilize people, and prepare the ground for the child’s immunization. Each mediator has a vaccination schedule for every child, and reminds parents when it is time to go to a health facility. Mediators are carefully selected from among their communities, they are persons of trust, and are usually involved in supporting the community through other projects – so they are familiar to the people they interact with and have already gained trust of the local residents. The same is true of the Fafulić family, who are now ready to have their Irma vaccinated after receiving relevant information from Edin. Mujo Fafulić Mujo Fafulić, president of the Kakanj-based Roma Support Centre “Romalen” “Roma mediators have a vital role to play in Roma communities. Statistics show that only four percent of Roma children in BiH are vaccinated. This project aims to raise this immunization rate, even using statistics on the mortality of unvaccinated children as one of the arguments,” explains Mujo Fafulić, president of the Kakanj-based Roma Support Centre “Romalen”, the organization implementing the project. “These are one-on-one conversations, with mediators visiting communities to check on the spot what the vaccination rates are and whether children are vaccinated at all, as well as which vaccines they have received, while also motivating parents to have their children immunized if they have not done so before.  "By the time they reach adulthood, children should complete the vaccination cycle, and mediators are doing outreach work to explain the benefits of on-schedule immunization, as well as the adverse consequences of failing to do so." Mujo Fafulić Emina has already received the vaccines scheduled for her age, and she confidently shares her last words of advice with her cousin Irma before they leave, so that there are two parallel conversations going on in the living room – adults talk about the benefits of immunization and health care, and the little girls, holding hands, have their own conversation about what the needle looks like and where on the hand the nurse will give Irma a jab. Rubbing their hands with disinfectant, with their facemasks on, the girls extend their hands to the mediator, ready to go – Emina, being more experienced, will escort Irma to help her go through this whole experience as painlessly as possible. Irma’s parents Jasmina and Nermin are staying at home and waving to the girls from the window. Holding hands, with their fingers intertwined in a clasp that shows care and love, the children set out together on their trip to the health centre. The trip they are taking is one that is recommended to everyone as it promises better health and protection against diseases that are still lurking about and are far from being eradicated. Dr. Rownak Khan, UNICEF Representative in BIH confirms that by saying: “Vaccination is the best protection from communicable diseases. Unfortunately, Bosnia and Herzegovina’s low immunization rates, 68% full immunization and only 4% among Roma children, mean that children in this country are at high risk of getting vaccine preventable diseases resulting in outbreaks, particularly measles outbreaks. Currently, UNICEF is working with two Roma NGOs, Kali Sara and Romalen, to raise awareness on the importance of vaccination in Roma communities, by connecting with health institutions, Public Health Institutes and ministries with Roma communities through Roma health mediators to reach the most vulnerable children. This will also reduce equity gaps and will protect all children in BiH from vaccine-preventable diseases.” All children, regardless of the country or circumstances in which they live, have the right to develop and thrive. As a key component of the human right to health, immunization saves millions of lives and protects children against vaccine-preventable diseases. Immunization saves two to three million lives each year. Vaccines now protect more children than ever before, but nearly one in five infants miss out on the basic vaccines they need to stay alive and healthy. Low immunization levels among poor and marginalized children compromise gains made in all other areas of maternal and child health.   This material is produced within the initiative Increase awareness on the importance of vaccination with special focus on Roma communities - Immunization for every child! UNICEF Country Office in Bosnia and Herzegovina’s programme on immunization, funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) through UNICEF Headquarters. We would also like to thank UNICEF Europe and Central Asia Regional Office for their support.
Article
29 Апрель 2022
Amid war, Ukrainian mothers fight for a healthy future for children
https://www.unicef.org/eca/stories/amid-war-ukrainian-mothers-fight-healthy-future-children
Even war will not stop Hanna Omelchenko, a 30-year-old mother who fled Kyiv with her family, from getting her children vaccinated.  “I believe that vaccination is really the least we can do for our children,” she says. “Not so long ago, many children were dying from dangerous infections or suffering terrible consequences. Now medicine and science allow us to get protected.” image A few weeks ago, Hanna was cradling her twin sons in their basement as the shells pounded the ground above. Now, having found a safe place to stay in Uzhgorod, a city in western Ukraine, she is determined to give one-year-old Solomiya and Myron a shot at a healthy, peaceful future.  Yulia Dovhanych, who founded a medical center in Uzhgorod, is one of the doctors helping her to secure it. "War is not a reason to avoid vaccination,” says Yulia. “On the contrary, now all of us, both doctors and parents with children, need to be even more disciplined and take better care of our health.”   image Many Ukrainians like Hanna have found themselves far from home, without a family doctor. There are 50,000 internally displaced people in Uzhgorod alone. And, as the violence in Ukraine escalates, so too does the risk of infection outbreaks.  At the end of last year, an outbreak of polio was reported in the country’s Zakarpattia and Rivne regions, resulting in the paralysis of at least two children. Now, these regions are seeing the arrival of some of the highest numbers of internally displaced persons from across the country.   image Yulia, who has been working as a doctor for 11 years, knows all too well how crucial it is for children to be vaccinated.  “It is extremely important to protect children from polio, because there is no cure for this disease,” she says. “And it can have grave consequences, such as lifelong paralysis. Vaccination protects against such consequences and death from the disease." In Uzhgorod hundreds of displaced families have turned to local health facilities to get their children vaccinated. Some children will see a doctor for the first time, having been born only recently.  “I am glad that I found a medical center, where the children and I feel comfortable and where we get everything we need,” says Hanna. “I want to address Ukrainian mothers – vaccination is really the least you can do to protect your child. If you are not under fire and are safe, do not hesitate to vaccinate your children! All the barriers you may think of are nothing compared to the threats posed to your baby by infectious diseases.”   image "Everyone has their own fight now,” adds Yulia. “Our fight is against infectious diseases. It is a fight for health. There is no cure for polio. But there is a reliable protection – vaccination.” In the past months, millions of Ukrainian families have fled their homes and now face an uncertain future, meaning that thousands of children across the country are missing vital doses of vaccines to protect them from polio, measles, diphtheria and other life-threatening diseases. Before February 2022, a steady and measurable process has been achieved in revamping routine immunization rates to pre-pandemic levels.  Now, low immunization rates, coupled with an ongoing polio outbreak, limited access to hygiene, and overcrowded waiting and transit points in others, pose a serious threat of infectious diseases outbreaks in Ukraine.  UNICEF is providing ongoing support to the government of Ukraine and its national immunization program through training health professionals, helping to set up and maintain the vaccine cold chain system, launching communication and behavior change campaigns on the importance of vaccination, and combating misinformation about vaccines.  
Programme
29 Январь 2021
Improving health literacy among refugee and migrant children
https://www.unicef.org/eca/stories-region/improving-health-literacy-among-refugee-and-migrant-children
UNICEF has worked with partners and with young refugees and migrants on the ground to identify information gaps – work that has, in turn, guided the development of health literacy packages across all five countries on a range of crucial health issues, from immunization and nutrition to sexual and reproductive health (SRH) and gender-based violence (GBV). The assessment has shaped the development of detailed plans on how to ensure that health messages reach their audience and have an impact. The health literacy packages have also drawn on existing materials, including Facts for Life , My Safety and Resilience Girls Pocket Guide and an adapted version of the UNFPA curriculum: ‘Boys on the Move’. Refugees and migrants face a chronic lack of health information in their own languages, and a lack of information that reaches them through the channels or people they trust health navigation Some common priorities have been identified by refugees and migrants across all five countries, including access to immunization and other primary health care services, breastfeeding and young child feeding, and the prevention of GBV. They have also flagged up the pressing need for more mental health and psychological services. Other issues have emerged as priorities in specific countries, including cyberbullying and online safety in Italy, and substance abuse among young people In Serbia – the focus of a new in-depth UNICEF study. Not surprisingly, the COVID-19 pandemic is a new and urgent priority for refugee and migrant communities – and one that has heightened the health risks they already face by curtailing their movements and their access to health services. A consultation with refugee and migrant adolescents and young people living in Italy has revealed major gaps in their knowledge about sexual and reproductive health, drawing on an online survey, a U-Report poll and a series of focus group discussions. It has highlighted some common misunderstandings, such as the myth that masturbation causes infertility, and continued perceptions around the importance of a woman’s virginity at marriage, as well as knowledge gaps around menstruation, pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections. The consultation also found, however, that the young participants want to know far more about this crucial area of health. As one young man from Guinea noted during a focus group discussion: “often young people do not want to know if they have an infection, also because they are not aware that these can be treated. It is so critical to raise awareness on STIs tests and treatment options.”  
Article
01 Февраль 2021
Strengthening the implementation of health policies
https://www.unicef.org/eca/stories/strengthening-implementation-health-policies
The initiative also promotes and supports multi-disciplinary approaches and teams to address the complex causes of health problems among refugee and migrant children – from trauma, anxiety and over-crowded conditions, to lack of hygiene facilities and immunization. As a result, support from the ‘RM Child-health’ initiative builds trust between refugee and migrant families and health providers. At the Centre for refugees and migrants near Bela Palanka in south-eastern Serbia, for example, the needs of refugee and migrant women have shaped the development of the Community Centre run by ADRA, with its Mother and Baby Corner for women with infants. Here, women can take part in language classes, sports activities and, crucially, in workshops about their own health and rights. “ The most important thing is that all the advice from our doctor is in line with their economic circumstances and current living situation [in Reception centres],” explains social worker Andja Petrovic. “The advice is tailored to their life and I think they particularly like that, because they can see that their situation is acknowledged. Because when they go to a doctor [in other facilities], they get advice that they can’t follow because they don’t have the living conditions for it.” Also in Serbia, funding from the ‘RM Child-health Initiative’ supports work by UNICEF and the Institute of Mental Health that looks beyond the provision of basic health care to assess the scale and nature of substance abuse among refugee and migrant communities. This cutting-edge field research will guide the development of materials and capacity building specifically for health and community workers who are in regular contact with young refugees and migrants, helping these workers to identify and tackle substance abuse by connecting children and youth to support services. As one researcher involved in the research commented: “Most of those children have spent several years without a home or any sense of stability. They can't make a single plan about the future since everything in their life is so uncertain. I can't begin to imagine how frightening that is.” By building greater rapport between frontline workers and children, and by equipping those workers with the support, skills and resources they need, the ‘RM Child-health’ initiative is helping to transform health policies into health practice. This vital work has been particularly crucial in 2020, as frontline workers have had to confront – and adapt to – the greatest public health crisis in living memory: the COVID-19 pandemic. Logo This story is part of the Project ‘Strengthening Refugee and Migrant Children’s Health Status in Southern and South Eastern Europe’, Co-funded by the Health Programme of the European Union (the ‘RM Child-Health’ initiative).It represents the views of the author only and is her sole responsibility; it cannot be considered to reflect the views of the European Commission and/or the Consumers, Health, Agriculture and Food Executive Agency or any other body of the European Union. The European Commission and the Agency do not accept any responsibility for use that may be made of the information it contains.
Press release
27 Январь 2019
UNICEF appeals for $3.9 billion in emergency assistance for 41 million children affected by conflict or disaster
https://www.unicef.org/eca/press-releases/unicef-appeals-39-billion-emergency-assistance-41-million-children-affected-conflict
GENEVA/NEW YORK, 29 January 2019 – Millions of children living in countries affected by conflict and disaster lack access to vital child protection services, putting their safety, well-being and futures at risk, UNICEF warned today as it appealed for $3.9 billion to support its work for children in humanitarian crises . UNICEF’s Humanitarian Action for Children sets out the agency’s 2019 appeal and its efforts to provide 41 million children with access to safe water, nutrition, education, health and protection in 59 countries across the globe. Funding for child protection programmes accounts for $385 million of the overall appeal, including almost $121 million for protection services for children affected by the Syria crisis. “Today millions of children living through conflict or disaster are suffering horrific levels of violence, distress and trauma,” said UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore. “The impact of our child protection work cannot be overstated. When children do not have safe places to play, when they cannot be reunited with their families, when they do not receive psychosocial support, they will not heal from the unseen scars of war.”   UNICEF estimates that more than 34 million children living through conflict and disaster lack access to child protection services, including 6.6 million children in Yemen, 5.5 million children in Syria and 4 million children in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC ). Child protection services include all efforts to prevent and respond to abuse, neglect, exploitation, trauma and violence. UNICEF also works to ensure that the protection of children is central to all other areas of the organisation’s humanitarian programmes, including water, sanitation and hygiene, education and other areas of work by identifying, mitigating and responding to potential dangers to children’s safety and wellbeing.  However, funding constraints, as well as other challenges including warring parties’ growing disregard for international humanitarian law and the denial of humanitarian access, mean that aid agencies’ capacity to protect children is severely limited. In the DRC, for example, UNICEF received just a third of the $21 million required for child protection programmes in 2018, while around one-fifth of child protection funding for Syrian children remained unmet. “Providing these children with the support they need is critical, but without significant and sustained international action, many will continue to fall through the cracks,” said Manuel Fontaine, UNICEF Director of Emergency Programmes. “The international community should commit to supporting the protection of children in emergencies.” 2019 marks the 30th anniversary of the landmark Convention on the Rights of the Child and the 70th anniversary of the Geneva Conventions, yet today, more countries are embroiled in internal or international conflict than at any other time in the past three decades, threatening the safety and wellbeing of millions of children. UNICEF’s appeal comes one month after the children’s agency said that the world is failing to protect children living in conflict around the world, with catastrophic consequences. Children who are continuously exposed to violence or conflict, especially at a young age, are at risk of living in a state of toxic stress – a condition that, without the right support can lead to negative life-long consequences for their cognitive, social and emotional development. Some children impacted by war, displacement and other traumatic events – such as sexual and gender-based violence – require specialized care to help them cope and recover. The five largest individual appeals are for Syrian refugees and host communities in Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Iraq and Turkey (US$ 904 million); Yemen (US$ 542.3 million); The Democratic Republic of the Congo (US$ 326.1 million); Syria (US$ 319.8 million) and South Sudan (US$ 179.2 million). ###   Notes to editors:   In total, working alongside its partners, UNICEF aims to: Provide 4 million children and caregivers with access to psychosocial support; Provide almost 43 million people with access to safe water; Reach 10.1 million children with formal or non-formal basic education; Immunize 10.3 million children against measles; Treat 4.2 million children with severe acute malnutrition. In the first 10 months of 2018, as a result of UNICEF’s support: 3.1 million children and caregivers received psychosocial support; 35.3 million people had access to safe water; 5.9 million children accessed some form of education; 4.7 million children were vaccinated against measles; 2.6 million children were treated for severe acute malnutrition. Photos and multimedia materials are available for download here: https://weshare.unicef.org/Package/2AMZIFI7QW8B Humanitarian Action for Children 2019 and individual appeals can be found here:  https://uni.cf/HAC_2019 On 23 September 2018 in Ukraine, Masha Khromchenko, 11, stands in the kindergarten class room that took a direct hit from a shell Novotoshkivske in the Luhansk region. The shell caused massive damage to the facility and surrounding residential area. UNICEF/UN0243152/Morris VII Photo On 23 September 2018 in Ukraine, Masha Khromchenko, 11, stands in the kindergarten class room that took a direct hit from a shell Novotoshkivske in the Luhansk region. The shell caused massive damage to the facility and surrounding residential area.
Programme
02 Октябрь 2017
Roma children
https://www.unicef.org/eca/what-we-do/ending-child-poverty/roma-children
The Roma are one of Europe’s largest and most disadvantaged minority groups. Of the 10 to 12 million Roma people in Europe, around two-thirds live in central and eastern European countries. While some have escaped from poverty, millions live in slums and lack the basic services they need, from healthcare and education to electricity and clean water.  Discrimination against Roma communities is commonplace, fuelling their exclusion. Far from spurring support for their social inclusion, their poverty and poor living conditions often reinforce the stereotyped views of policymakers and the public. And far from receiving the support that is their right, Roma children face discrimination that denies them the essentials for a safe, healthy and educated childhood.   Discrimination against Roma children can start early, and have a life-long impact. The problems facing Roma children can start early in life. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, for example, Roma infants are four times more likely than others to be born underweight. They are also less likely to be registered at birth, and many lack the birth certificate that signals their right to a whole range of services.   As they grow, Roma children are more likely to be underweight than non-Roma children and less likely to be fully immunized. Few participate in early childhood education. They are less likely than non-Roma children to start or complete primary school, and Roma girls, in particular, are far less likely to attend secondary school. Only 19 per cent of Roma children make it this far in Serbia, compared to 89 per cent of non-Roma children.  There are also disparities in literacy rates across 10 countries in the region, with rates of 80 per cent for Roma boys and just under 75 per cent for Roma girls, compared to near universal literacy rates at national level.    Roma children are too often segregated into ‘remedial’ classes within regular schools, and are more likely to be in ‘special’ schools – a reflection of schools that are failing to meet their needs, rather than any failure on their part.   In Roma communities, child marriage may be perceived as a ‘valid’ way to protect young girls, and as a valued tradition. In reality, such marriages deepen the disparities experienced by girls, and narrow their opportunities in life.  In many Balkan countries, half of all Roma women aged 20-24 were married before the age of 18, compared to around 10 per cent nationally. Child marriage and school drop-out are closely linked, particularly for girls, and such marriages also expose girls to the dangers of early pregnancy and childbirth, as well as a high risk of domestic violence. 
Article
29 Январь 2021
Strengthening national health capacity for refugee and migrant children
https://www.unicef.org/eca/stories/strengthening-national-health-capacity-refugee-and-migrant-children
“This collaboration is helping to stimulate public demand for strong national health systems that work for everybody and that rise to new challenges, such as disease outbreaks.” Afshan Khan, UNICEF Regional Director The ‘RM Child-Health’ initiative has supported work across five European countries to enhance and strengthen the capacity of national health systems to meet the health needs of refugee and migrant children. This work recognizes that a health system that works for such vulnerable children is a health system that works for every child. At first glance, helping a 10-year girl from Iran, now living in Bosnia and Herzegovina, get a new pair of glasses might seem a simple thing. For Maisa, however, this is the end result of a continuum of intensive support, from identifying a girl who struggles with an eye condition, to connecting her to a skilled ophthalmologist. And now Maisa stands in front of a mirror, trying on the glasses that will enhance her life, learning and play. Such a momentous day is only possible when an established health system is equipped to accommodate and respond to the complex needs of refugee and migrant children. Support from the ‘RM Child-Health’ initiative aims to reinforce and enhance health systems across five European countries (Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Greece, Italy and Serbia) so that these systems can deliver the high-quality services that are the right of every child – and that every child needs, regardless of their origins. The aim: to ensure that health systems catch every refugee and migrant child who is in danger of slipping through the gaps. And there are additional benefits: a health system that works for these vulnerable and excluded children is a health system that works for every child, and that can reach those who are so often the very hardest to reach. This 24-month, €4.3 million initiative, which was launched in January 2020 by the European Union Directorate-General for Health and Food Safety, aims to strengthen the capacity of health systems to deliver health care to refugee and migrant children. That means ensuring access to life-saving immunization, to mental health and psycho-social support, and services to prevent and respond to gender-based violence, as well as maternal and new-born health care and nutrition. Stronger health systems are needed to overcome the bottlenecks that confront so many refugee and migrant families when they try to access health care. “ The profound challenges that often confront populations – especially children – on the move can include cultural and language barriers, stigma and discrimination on the part of health providers, and a lack of detailed medical records or paperwork,” says Dr. Basil Rodriques, UNICEF Regional Health Advisor. “They may also have their own reasons to distrust state-provided services, including fears of deportation.”
Report
01 Июль 2015
The Rights of Roma Children and Women
https://www.unicef.org/eca/reports/rights-roma-children-and-women
THE RIGHTS OF ROMA CHILDREN AND WOMENin Bosnia and Herzegovina, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and Serbia A comparative review and further analysis of findings from MICS surveys in Roma settlements in the three countries The Rights of Roma Children and Women in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and Serbia: A comparative review and further analysis of findings from MICS surveys in Roma settlements in the three countries Principal authorAniko Bernat Overall development and reviewSiraj Mahmudlu, UNICEF Monitoring and Evaluation Specialist Elena Gaia, UNICEF Policy Analysis SpecialistAna Abdelbasit, UNICEF consultant Editorial supportAnthony BurnettAnna Grojec Review and inputsAleksandra Jovic, Child Rights Monitoring Specialist, UNICEF office in SerbiaSabina Zunic, Monitoring and Evaluation Specialist, UNICEF office in Bosnia and HerzegovinaZoran Stojanov, Monitoring and Evaluation Officer, UNICEF office in the former Yugoslav Republic of MacedoniaProfessor Slobodan Cvejic, Director of Research, SeCons Development Initiative Group, Serbia Suggested citation The United Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF), Geneva, July 2015 Permission is required to reproduce any part of this publication. Permission will be freely granted to educational or non-profit organizations. To request permission and any other information on the publication, please contact: United Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF)Regional Office for Central and Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CEE/CIS)Palais des NationsCH-1211 Geneva 10Switzerland Tel.: +41 22 909 5000Fax: +41 22 909 5909Email: ceecis@unicef.org All reasonable precautions have been taken by UNICEF to verify the information contained in this publication. Design and layout: Cover photo: UNICEF/CEECIS2011/Mcconnico THE RIGHTS OF ROMA CHILDREN AND WOMENin Bosnia and Herzegovina, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and Serbia A comparative review and further analysis of findings from MICS surveys in Roma settlements in the three countries for countries to invest in Roma children and young people as engines of sustainable development and actors of social change. Real evidence about the situation and rights of Roma children, young people and women continues to be, unfortunately, largely missing. Such lack of information hinders the implementation of effective social inclusion policies. In response, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and Serbia are among the first countries ever to collect data, through a representative and reliable process, using the Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS), and make disaggregated data about Roma children publicly available. Drawing on these efforts, The Rights of Roma Children and Women in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and Serbia aims to document how Roma children fare in comparison to national averages for all children, and where achievements have been made in social inclusion in the three countries. Bosnia and Herzegovina, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and Serbia deserve our praise for their commitment to the most vulnerable. Their investments in disaggregated data collection are already paying off. With the data presented in this study, the three countries are now able to track and document progress for different groups of children and measure the value for money of public policies. The examples from the three countries have already inspired some of the neighbouring countries, such as Montenegro, which has recently concluded its MICS, for the first time with an additional focus on Roma settlements. I believe that this study will inspire other countries to follow a similar path in the realization of the rights enshrined in the Convention on the Rights of the Child and other human rights standards for children, including those of the European Union. As this study demonstrates, UNICEFs core contribution is to generate systematic knowledge and strengthen national institutions and capacities to track, reach, protect and include the most disadvantaged children, among them Roma children. UNICEF stands ready to provide support to sharpen national systems to realize all rights for all children everywhere. There has been great progress for children in Central and Eastern Europe and Central Asia following the entry into force of the Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1989, and since UNICEF began its programmes of cooperation with several countries of the region more than 20 years ago. Such positive transformations in the realization of childrens rights have contributed significantly to democracy, the rule of law and human rights. But are children benefiting equally from improved living conditions and access to services and opportunities? Do all children enjoy the same opportunities to develop and thrive? Or are particular groups of children being left behind? The post-2015 agenda is one of global action for children, engaging everyone governments, institutions, corporations, communities, families and individuals in every country. This is an extraordinary opportunity to document past achievements, assess the challenges that lie ahead and drive change for every child, especially the most disadvantaged and vulnerable children. Across Europe, there are several groups of children who are at risk of being excluded, hard to reach and most vulnerable. Among these, Roma children are particularly at risk of having their rights denied. Discrimination against Roma children starts even before they are born, due to lack of adequate prenatal and maternal health care. Too often, it accompanies them throughout their lives. Of the 12 million Roma people living in Europe, half 6 million people are estimated to be under 18 years of age. This figure highlights the urgency of breaking the vicious circle of discrimination as early as possible: through adequate support at home, in public services and in society at large, Roma boys and girls can have an equal start, enjoy a better life, contribute to their own culture and join their fellow citizens in building the economies and societies of their respective countries. Roma children present a real opportunity for Europe. By investing in all children today, Europe will be able to achieve its social inclusion targets by 2020, in particular those related to poverty reduction, early school leaving and employment and activity rates. The 2011 European Union Framework for National Roma Integration Strategies and the 2013 European Commissions Recommendation Investing in Children: Breaking the cycle of disadvantage provide a solid policy environment FOREWORDby Marie-Pierre Poirier, UNICEF Regional Director iii Iv THE RIGHTS OF ROMA CHILDREN AND WOMEN Roma children present a real opportunity for Europe. By investing in all children today, Europe will be able to achieve its social inclusion targets by 2020. UNICEF/CEECIS2011/Mcconnico v Bos nia and Her zego vina : MIC S S urve y of Rom a S ettle men ts a nd N atio nal S urve y, 2 011 2012 The form er Y ugos lav Rep ublic of M aced onia : MIC S S urve y of Rom a S ettle men ts a nd N atio nal S urve y, 2 0112 Ser bia: MIC S S urve y of Rom a S ettle men ts a nd N atio nal S urve y, 2 0103 Top icIn dic ato r Bo snia an d H erze govi na Th e fo rmer Yu gosl av R epu blic of Mac edo nia Ser bia Ro ma sett lem ents Nat ion alR om a se ttle men tsN atio nal Ro ma sett lem ents Nat ion al Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal HO US EH OLD S B Y P RE SE NC E O F C HIL DR EN AN D C HIL DR EN S L IvIN G A RR AN GE ME NT S A ND OR PH AN HO OD Hou seho lds with chi ldre nH ouse hold s w ith at le ast One chi ld a ged 04 year snd 4nd 35nd nd13 ndnd 38nd nd17 ndnd 48nd nd17 per cent One chi ld a ged 017 ye ars ndnd 68nd nd50 ndnd 70nd nd44 ndnd 78nd nd37 per cent Orp hane d ch ildre nC hild ren age 017 ye ars livin g w ith neith er b iolo gica l pa rent 34 41 00 14 21 11 27 41 21 per cent Prev alen ce o f ch ildre n w ith o ne o r bo th p aren ts d ead 54 44 33 34 31 22 32 21 22 per cent TH E R IGH T F RO M B IRT H T O A NA ME , A N AT ION ALI TY A ND AN IDE NT ITY Birt h re gist ratio n5B irth regi stra tion 9596 96nd ndnd 9998 9810 010 010 098 100 9999 9999 per cent TH E R IGH T T O A N A DE QU AT E S TAN DA RD OF LIv ING Wat er a nd sani tatio nU se o f im prov ed drin king -wat er sour ces ndnd 97nd nd10 0nd nd99 ndnd 100 ndnd 98nd nd10 0pe r ce nt Use of impr oved sa nita tion ndnd 73nd nd94 ndnd 91nd nd93 ndnd 85nd nd98 per cent Pla ce fo r ha nd was hing 6nd nd92 ndnd 98nd ndnd ndnd ndnd nd91 ndnd 99pe r ce nt Ava ilabi lity of s oap ndnd 97nd nd99 ndnd ndnd ndnd ndnd 96nd nd99 per cent Sol id f uel u seU se o f so lid f uels as the prim ary sour ce of d omes tic e nerg y to coo k ndnd 92nd nd70 ndnd 33nd nd34 ndnd 76nd nd32 per cent SU MM AR Y T AB LE1 vI THE RIGHTS OF ROMA CHILDREN AND WOMEN Top icIn dic ato r Bo snia an d H erze govi na Th e fo rmer Yu gosl av R epu blic of Mac edo nia Ser bia Ro ma sett lem ents Nat ion alR om a se ttle men tsN atio nal Ro ma sett lem ents Nat ion al Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal TH E R IGH T T O H EA LTH Low bi rthw eigh tLo w b irthw eigh t in fant s (b elow 2,5 00 gram s) ndnd 14nd nd3 ndnd 11nd nd6 ndnd 10nd nd5 per cent Infa nts wei ghed at birt hnd nd96 ndnd 98nd nd94 ndnd 96nd nd96 ndnd 100 per cent Nut ritio nal stat usU nder wei ght prev alen ce Mod erat e an d S ever e (- 2 S D) 99 92 12 87 82 11 77 72 22 per cent Sev ere (- 3 SD )2 32 11 12 22 00 01 21 11 1pe r ce nt Stu ntin g pr eval ence per cent Mod erat e an d S ever e (- 2 S D) 2220 219 99 2112 176 45 2523 246 77 per cent Sev ere (- 3 SD )9 78 44 43 33 22 211 810 34 3pe r ce nt Was ting prev alen ce Mod erat e an d S ever e (- 2 S D) 88 82 22 45 52 12 56 53 44 per cent Sev ere (- 3 SD )4 34 21 21 22 00 03 22 11 1pe r ce nt Bre astf eedi ng and infa nt feed ing Chi ldre n ev er brea stfe dnd nd95 ndnd 95nd nd96 ndnd 94nd nd93 ndnd 90pe r ce nt Ear ly in itiat ion of brea stfe edin gnd nd50 ndnd 42nd nd39 ndnd 21nd nd10 ndnd 8pe r ce nt Exc lusi ve brea stfe edin g un der 6 m onth s (20) (24) 2218 1919 (*) (*) (32) 3116 2314 49 1413 14pe r ce nt Con tinue d br east feed ing at 1 ye ar (42) (*) 5013 1212 (*) (*) (53) (28) (39) 3448 5754 2414 18pe r ce nt Con tinue d br east feed ing at 2 ye ars (68) (*) 6915 1012 (*) (*) (55) (14) (11) 1341 (31) 3721 915 per cent Pred omin ant brea stfe edin g un der 6 m onth s (63) (65) 6461 3346 (*) (*) (68) 4742 4452 (53) 5244 3639 per cent Dur atio n of br east feed ing 2024 2510 78 2214 188 1110 1315 148 78 mon ths Age -app ropr iate br east feed ing (02 3 m onth s) 4138 4020 1718 4738 4326 1922 3334 3422 1619 per cent Min imum mea l fr eque ncy (62 3 m onth s) 6258 6071 7472 6956 6371 5965 6777 7284 8484 per cent vII Top icIn dic ato r Bo snia an d H erze govi na Th e fo rmer Yu gosl av R epu blic of Mac edo nia Ser bia Ro ma sett lem ents Nat ion alR om a se ttle men tsN atio nal Ro ma sett lem ents Nat ion al Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Bre astf eedi ng and infa nt feed ing Bot tle fe edin g (0 23 mon ths) 5459 5677 8280 6868 6882 7779 8282 8285 8585 per cent Milk feed ing freq uenc y fo r no n-br east fed child ren (62 3 m onth s) (83) (73) 7893 8991 (84) (69) 7693 9192 5961 6090 8989 per cent Intr oduc tion of s olid , se mi-s olid or soft fo ods (68 mon ths) (*) (*) (67) (68) (*) 71(* )(* )(* )(3 9)(4 2)41 (48) (84) 6592 7784 per cent Vacc inat ions re ceiv ed b y 12 m onth s of age (b y 18 mon ths of a ge fo r M MR )7 Tube rcul osis im mun izat ion cove rage ndnd 86nd nd98 ndnd 96nd nd97 ndnd ndnd ndnd per cent Polio imm uniz atio n co vera gend nd14 ndnd 85nd nd81 ndnd 92nd ndnd ndnd ndpe r ce nt Imm uniz atio n co vera ge fo r di phth eria , per tuss is and teta nus (DP T) ndnd 13nd nd86 ndnd 78nd nd92 ndnd ndnd ndnd per cent Mea sles im mun izat ion cove rage ndnd 22nd nd80 ndnd 89nd nd92 ndnd ndnd ndnd per cent Hep atiti s B im mun izat ion cove rage ndnd 15nd nd84 ndnd 85nd nd91 ndnd ndnd ndnd per cent Hae mop hilu s in fluen zae type B (Hib ) im mun izat ion cove rage 8 ndnd ndnd ndnd ndnd 90nd nd94 ndnd ndnd ndnd per cent Car e of illn ess Ora l reh ydra tion ther apy with co ntin ued feed ing 5450 5260 4855 (51) (55) 5372 (60) 6756 6360 5368 60pe r ce nt Car e se ekin g fo r su spec ted pneu mon ia (78) (82) 80(9 2)(8 0)87 (*) (*) (76) (*) (*) (77) 9390 9289 9190 per cent Ant ibio tic t reat men t of sus pect ed pneu mon ia (79) (71) 75(7 5)(7 8)76 (*) (*) (69) (*) (*) (82) 9092 9185 7782 per cent Ear ly m arria geW omen age d 15 49 year s m arrie d be fore ag e 15 ndnd 15nd nd0 ndnd 12nd nd1 ndnd 16nd nd1 per cent Wom en a ged 204 9 ye ars mar ried befo re age 18 ndnd 48nd nd10 ndnd 47nd nd11 ndnd 54nd nd8 per cent Youn g w omen ag ed 1 519 yea rs curr ently mar ried or in u nion ndnd 38nd nd1 ndnd 22nd nd4 ndnd 44nd nd5 per cent vIII THE RIGHTS OF ROMA CHILDREN AND WOMEN Top icIn dic ato r Bo snia an d H erze govi na Th e fo rmer Yu gosl av R epu blic of Mac edo nia Ser bia Ro ma sett lem ents Nat ion alR om a se ttle men tsN atio nal Ro ma sett lem ents Nat ion al Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Con trac eptio n an d un met ne ed Ado lesc ent birt h ra te9 ndnd 145 ndnd 8nd nd(9 4)10 ndnd 12nd nd15 9nd nd24 per 1,00 0 Ear ly c hild bear ing (at leas t on e liv e bi rth befo re a ge 1 8)11 ndnd 31nd ndnd ndnd 27nd ndnd ndnd 31nd nd3 per cent Con trac eptiv e pr eval ence rat end nd25 ndnd 46nd nd37 ndnd 40nd nd64 ndnd 61pe r ce nt Unm et n eed for cont race ptio nnd nd28 ndnd 9nd nd21 ndnd 12nd nd10 ndnd 7pe r ce nt Mat erna l and ne wbo rn h ealth Ant enat al c are cove rage At leas t on ce b y sk illed per sonn elnd nd79 ndnd 87nd nd94 ndnd 99nd nd95 ndnd 99pe r ce nt At leas t fo ur t imes by any pro vide rnd nd62 ndnd 84nd nd86 ndnd 94nd nd72 ndnd 94pe r ce nt Con tent of ante nata l ca re (b lood pre ssur e m easu red, gav e ur ine and bloo d sa mpl es) ndnd 70nd nd85 ndnd 83nd nd94 ndnd 89nd nd98 per cent Ski lled atte ndan t at de liver ynd nd99 ndnd 100 ndnd 100 ndnd 98nd nd10 0nd nd10 0pe r ce nt Inst itutio nal deliv erie snd nd99 ndnd 100 ndnd 99nd nd98 ndnd 99nd nd10 0pe r ce nt Birt hs d eliv ered by Cae sare an s ectio nnd nd13 ndnd 14nd nd13 ndnd 25nd nd14 ndnd 25pe r ce nt HIV /AID S know ledg e an d at titud es12 Wom en a ged 152 4 w ho r ecei ved HIV co unse lling dur ing ante nata l car e ndnd 2nd nd12 ndnd ndnd ndnd ndnd 4nd nd11 per cent Wom en a ged 152 4 w ho h ad a n H IV t est and wer e te sted for HIV dur ing ante nata l ca re a nd r ecei ved the resu lts ndnd 0nd nd5 ndnd ndnd ndnd ndnd 1nd nd8 per cent Wom en a nd m en aged 15 24 w ho know whe re t o be te sted for HIV 5123 nd71 70nd ndnd ndnd ndnd 3227 nd69 70nd per cent Wom en a nd m en aged 15 24 w ho have bee n te sted for HIV and kno w t he resu lts 22 nd1 0nd ndnd ndnd ndnd 31 nd2 2nd per cent Ix Top icIn dic ato r Bo snia an d H erze govi na Th e fo rmer Yu gosl av R epu blic of Mac edo nia Ser bia Ro ma sett lem ents Nat ion alR om a se ttle men tsN atio nal Ro ma sett lem ents Nat ion al Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Sex ual beha viou r13 Youn g w omen and m en w ho h ave neve r ha d se x 4687 nd53 79nd ndnd ndnd ndnd 5583 nd32 48nd per cent Sex bef ore age 15 amon g w omen and m en a ged 152 4 ye ars 1412 nd2 0nd ndnd ndnd ndnd 1314 nd4 2nd per cent Age -mix ing amon g se xual par tner s (s ex with a p artn er w ho was 10 or m ore year s ol der) am ong wom en a nd m en aged 15 24 y ears 14 nd1 4nd ndnd ndnd ndnd 16 nd0 4nd per cent Toba cco use1 4To bacc o us e am ong wom en a ged 154 9 ye ars ndnd 55nd nd27 ndnd 42nd nd30 ndnd ndnd ndnd per cent Alc ohol use Alc ohol use am ong wom en a ged 154 9 ye ars ndnd 14nd nd18 ndnd 5nd nd3 ndnd ndnd ndnd per cent Use of alco hol befo re a ge 1 5 am ong wom en a ged 154 9 ye ars ndnd 5nd nd1 ndnd 11nd nd29 ndnd ndnd ndnd per cent TH E R IGH T T O S UR vIv AL, CA RE AN D D Ev ELO PM EN T F RO M T HE EA RLI ES T P OS SIB LE A GE Chi ld deve lopm ent Att enda nce in e arly ch ildho od e duca tion 12 212 1413 71 425 1922 88 841 4744 per cent Sup port for lear ning (a ny a dult enga ged in fo ur o r m ore activ ities ) 6765 6695 9695 6855 6292 9192 6669 6796 9595 per cent Fath ers sup port fo r le arni ng (f athe r en gage d in one or mor e ac tiviti es) 6653 6074 7876 6252 5776 6671 6461 6382 7478 per cent Lear ning mat eria ls: thre e or mor e ch ildre ns book s 1111 1154 5856 2925 2753 5252 2125 2376 7676 per cent Lear ning mat eria ls: two or m ore type s of pla ythi ngs 4650 4856 5756 6065 6272 6971 5353 5466 6063 per cent Ear ly C hild hood D evel opm ent Inde x86 8485 9598 9666 7972 9393 9386 9188 9495 94pe r ce nt x THE RIGHTS OF ROMA CHILDREN AND WOMEN Top icIn dic ato r Bo snia an d H erze govi na Th e fo rmer Yu gosl av R epu blic of Mac edo nia Ser bia Ro ma sett lem ents Nat ion alR om a se ttle men tsN atio nal Ro ma sett lem ents Nat ion al Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal TH E R IGH T T O E DU CA TIO N Lite racy and ed ucat ion Lite racy rat e am ong youn g w omen and m en a ged 152 4 ye ars 9069 nd10 099 ndnd 77nd nd97 nd78 77nd 100 99nd per cent Sch ool r eadi ness 44 410 2516 (41) (32) 3633 4940 7977 7894 9997 per cent Net inta ke r ate in prim ary educ atio n40 5547 8680 83(8 1)(8 7)84 9192 9193 8991 9198 95pe r ce nt Prim ary scho ol n et atte ndan ce r atio (a djus ted) 7168 6998 9898 8686 8699 9898 9087 8998 9999 per cent Sec onda ry s choo l ne t at tend ance rat io (adj uste d) 2718 2390 9392 4435 3987 8486 2317 1988 9089 per cent Prim ary com plet ion rate 9154 7314 414 814 673 6267 103 9297 5175 6310 010 810 4pe r ce nt Tran sitio n ra te t o se cond ary scho ol(7 8)(6 2)71 9896 97(8 6)(7 4)80 9997 98(6 9)(6 7)68 9998 98pe r ce nt Gen der parit y in dex (prim ary scho ol) 7168 0.96 9898 1.00 8686 1.00 9998 1.00 9087 0.96 9899 1.01 Rat io Gen der parit y in dex (sec onda ry s choo l)27 180. 6890 931. 0344 350. 8087 840. 9623 170. 7288 901. 02R atio TH E R IGH T T O P RO TE CT ION FR OM PH YS ICA L O R M EN TAL vIO LEN CE , IN JUR Y O R A BU SE Chi ld d isci plin eV iole nt d isci plin e58 5758 6050 5581 8382 7167 6985 8786 7064 67pe r ce nt Dom estic vi olen ceA ttitu des tow ards do mes tic v iole nce amon g w omen and m en a ged 154 9 ye ars 2144 nd6 5nd nd25 ndnd 15nd nd20 ndnd 3nd per cent TH E R IGH T T O A CC ES S IN FOR MA TIO N15 Acc ess to m ass med iaE xpos ure to m ass med ia39 16nd 5644 ndnd ndnd ndnd ndnd 19nd nd58 ndpe r ce nt Use of info rmat ion and com mun icat ion tech nolo gy Use of com pute rs amon g w omen and m en a ged 152 4 ye ars 6036 nd94 93nd ndnd ndnd ndnd 6339 nd93 91nd per cent Use of Inte rnet am ong wom en a nd men age d 15 24 year s 6133 nd92 91nd ndnd ndnd ndnd 5225 nd86 85nd per cent xI Top icIn dic ato r Bo snia an d H erze govi na Th e fo rmer Yu gosl av R epu blic of Mac edo nia Ser bia Ro ma sett lem ents Nat ion alR om a se ttle men tsN atio nal Ro ma sett lem ents Nat ion al Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal Mal eFe mal eTo tal TH E v IEW OF CH ILD RE N A ND YO UN G P EO PLE : SU BJE CT IvE WE LL-B EIN G Sub ject ive wel l-be ing Life sat isfa ctio n am ong wom en a nd men age d 15 24 year s 4839 nd50 54nd nd60 ndnd 69nd 5359 nd68 67nd per cent Hap pine ss a mon g w omen and men ag ed 1 524 yea rs 7775 nd91 93nd nd84 ndnd 94nd 8787 nd92 93nd per cent Perc eptio n of a bett er li fe a mon g w omen and men ag ed 1 524 yea rs 1925 nd36 33nd nd39 ndnd 55nd 2626 nd36 43nd per cent ( ) F igur es t hat are base d on 25 49 u nwei ghte d ca ses. (*) F igur es t hat are base d on few er t han 25 u nwei ghte d ca ses. xII THE RIGHTS OF ROMA CHILDREN AND WOMEN UNICEF/CEECIS2013P-0387/Piroz xIII MAP 2. The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Maps of distribution of MICS samples in Roma settlements by administrative units and teams MAP 1. Bosnia and Herzegovina xIv THE RIGHTS OF ROMA CHILDREN AND WOMEN MAP 3. Serbia xv NOTES1 Detailed indicator definitions are provided in Annex A of this report. 2 MICS4 in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia did not use the Individual Mens Questionnaire. 3 The Individual Mens Questionnaire in the 2010 Serbia MICS was administered in each household to all men aged 1529 years; therefore, only those indicators for men that pertain to ages 1524 are shown in the table. 4 nd: Data not available. 5 In Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Birth Registration module was only administered as part of the Roma settlement survey. 6 The Hand Washing module was not administered in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. 7 MMR by 18 months of age applies for both Bosnia and Herzegovina and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. The Immunization module was not administered in Serbia. 8 Although Hib was included in the questionnaire for Bosnia and Herzegovina, because of the relatively recent introduction of this vaccination in some parts of the country, it was not included in the report. 9 Age-specific fertility rate for women age 1519 years, for the one-year period preceding the survey. 10 Figure based on 125249 person-years of exposure. 11 In Bosnia and Herzegovina, the full Child Mortality module, required to calculate indicator 5.2, was only administered within the survey of Roma settlements. 12 The HIV/AIDS module was not administered in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. 13 The Sexual Behaviour module was not administered in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. 14 The Tobacco and Alcohol Use module was not administered in Serbia. 15 The Access to Mass Media and Use of Information and Communication Technology module was not administered in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. xvI THE RIGHTS OF ROMA CHILDREN AND WOMEN Foreword .......................................................................................................................................................................... iiiMaps of distribution of MICS samples in Roma settlements by administrative units and teams ................................. xivList of tables ................................................................................................................................................................... xixList of figures .................................................................................................................................................................. xxAcronyms and abbreviations .......................................................................................................................................... xxi 1 Introduction .............................................................................................................................................................1 2 Methodology ...........................................................................................................................................................5 2.1 Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys ......................................................................................................................5 2.1.1 Sample design for MICS in Roma settlements ........................................................................................5 2.1.2 Questionnaires .........................................................................................................................................6 2.1.3 Training and fieldwork ...............................................................................................................................6 2.1.4 Sample coverage ......................................................................................................................................6 2.2 Methodology of the study ...................................................................................................................................8 2.3 Structure of the study .........................................................................................................................................9 3 The women and children in the study ................................................................................................................13 3.1 Age structure and household characteristics ....................................................................................................13 3.2 The women: Age, marital status, motherhood and education ..........................................................................15 4 The right from birth to a name, a nationality and an identity ..........................................................................23 4.1 Birth registration ................................................................................................................................................23 5 The right of children to an adequate standard of living ....................................................................................27 5.1 Housing .............................................................................................................................................................27 5.2 Water and sanitation ..........................................................................................................................................28 5.2.1 Improved water sources ........................................................................................................................32 5.2.2 Improved sanitation ................................................................................................................................33 5.2.3 Hand washing ........................................................................................................................................35 5.3 Solid fuels for cooking .......................................................................................................................................35 6 The right to health ................................................................................................................................................41 6.1 Nutrition .............................................................................................................................................................41 6.1.1 Low birthweight ......................................................................................................................................41 6.1.2 Nutritional status of children ...................................................................................................................42 6.1.3 Breastfeeding and young child feeding ...................................................................................................47 6.2 Vaccinations .......................................................................................................................................................54 6.3 Prevalence and treatment of illness ..................................................................................................................55 6.3.1 Diarrhoea ................................................................................................................................................55 6.3.2 Care seeking and antibiotic treatment of pneumonia ............................................................................56 6.4 Reproductive health ..........................................................................................................................................60 6.4.1 Child marriage ........................................................................................................................................60 6.4.2 Early childbearing ...................................................................................................................................62 6.4.3 Contraception .........................................................................................................................................62 6.4.4 Antenatal care ........................................................................................................................................66 6.4.5 Assistance at delivery ............................................................................................................................67 6.4.6 Place of delivery .....................................................................................................................................67 6.4.7 HIV/AIDS ................................................................................................................................................68 6.5 Continuum of care for maternal, newborn and child health ..............................................................................72 6.6 Consumption of tobacco and alcohol ................................................................................................................76 CONTENTS xvII 7 The right to survival, care and development from the earliest possible age ..................................................83 7.1 Early childhood education and learning ..............................................................................................................83 7.2 Early childhood development index ...................................................................................................................87 8 The right to education ..........................................................................................................................................93 8.1 Literacy among young women and men ..........................................................................................................93 8.2 School readiness ...............................................................................................................................................95 8.3 Primary and secondary school participation ......................................................................................................96 9 The right to protection from physical or mental violence, injury or abuse ...................................................109 9.1 Child discipline ................................................................................................................................................109 9.2 Attitudes towards domestic violence ...............................................................................................................111 10 The right to access information ......................................................................................................................... 119 11 The right to freedom of thought and expression: Listening to childrens views ..........................................125 Annex A: MICS4 Indicators: Numerators and denominators ........................................................................................135 xvIII THE RIGHTS OF ROMA CHILDREN AND WOMEN LIST OF TABLES Table 2.1 Modules of the household questionnaire......................................................................................................6Table 2.2 Modules of the womens questionnaire ........................................................................................................7Table 2.3 Modules of the mens questionnaire .............................................................................................................7Table 2.4 Modules of the childrens questionnaire........................................................................................................7Table 2.5 Results of household, women and under-five interviews .............................................................................8Table 2.6 Child rights and corresponding articles of international human rights instruments, Millennium Development Goals and the European Union Charter ..................................................................................9Table 3.1 Household composition...............................................................................................................................15Table 3.2 Womens background characteristics ..........................................................................................................17Table 3.3 Background characteristics of children under 5 years of age ......................................................................18Table 3.4 Childrens living arrangements and orphanhood .........................................................................................19Table 4.1 Birth registration ..........................................................................................................................................24Table 5.1 Characteristics of dwellings ........................................................................................................................28Table 5.2 Household possessions ..............................................................................................................................29Table 5.3 Wealth quintiles ...........................................................................................................................................29Table 5.4 Use of improved drinking-water sources ....................................................................................................33Table 5.5 Use of improved sanitation .........................................................................................................................34Table 5.6 Improved water source and improved sanitation ........................................................................................35Table 5.7 Hand washing ..............................................................................................................................................38Table 5.8 Hand washing and water sources ...............................................................................................................38Table 5.9 Solid fuel use ...............................................................................................................................................39Table 6.1 Nutritional status of children: Underweight ................................................................................................43Table 6.2 Nutritional status of children: Stunting ........................................................................................................44Table 6.3 Nutritional status of children: Wasting .........................................................................................................45Table 6.4 Comparison of anthropometric indicators between Roma children and national averages ........................45Table 6.5 Initial breastfeeding .....................................................................................................................................46Table 6.6 Duration of breastfeeding ............................................................................................................................48Table 6.7 Age-appropriate breastfeeding ....................................................................................................................49Table 6.8 Minimum meal frequency ...........................................................................................................................49Table 6.9 Bottle-feeding ..............................................................................................................................................50Table 6.10 Vaccinations .................................................................................................................................................54Table 6.11 Oral rehydration solutions and recommended homemade fluids ...............................................................55Table 6.12 Drinking practices during diarrhoea .............................................................................................................55Table 6.13 Eating practices during diarrhoea ................................................................................................................56Table 6.14 Knowledge of the two danger signs of pneumonia ....................................................................................57Table 6.15 Child marriage .............................................................................................................................................61Table 6.16 Adolescent birth rate and total fertility rate .................................................................................................62Table 6.17 Early childbearing .........................................................................................................................................63Table 6.18 Trends in early childbearing .........................................................................................................................63Table 6.19 Use of contraception ...................................................................................................................................64Table 6.20 Unmet need for contraception ....................................................................................................................65Table 6.21 Antenatal care provider ...............................................................................................................................66Table 6.22 Number of antenatal care visits ..................................................................................................................67Table 6.23 Assistance during delivery ..........................................................................................................................69Table 6.24 HIV counselling and testing during antenatal care ......................................................................................69Table 6.25 Knowledge of a place for HIV testing ..........................................................................................................70Table 6.26 Sexual behaviour that increases the risk of HIV infection ...........................................................................71Table 6.27 Tobacco use .................................................................................................................................................77Table 6.28 Use of alcohol ..............................................................................................................................................78Table 7.1 Early childhood education ............................................................................................................................84Table 7.2 Support for learning .....................................................................................................................................85Table 7.3 Learning materials .......................................................................................................................................86Table 7.4 Early Childhood Development Index ...........................................................................................................87Table 7.5 Differences in Early Childhood Development Index ....................................................................................88Table 7.6 Nutritional status and Early Childhood Development Index ........................................................................88 xIx Table 7.7 Tests of significance for difference of means between literacy-numeracy and Early Childhood Development Index ...........................................................................................................91 Table 8.1 Literacy among young women ....................................................................................................................94Table 8.2 Literacy among young men .........................................................................................................................94Table 8.3 School readiness .........................................................................................................................................96Table 8.4 Primary school entry ....................................................................................................................................97Table 8.5 Primary school attendance ........................................................................................................................102Table 8.6 Secondary school attendance ...................................................................................................................103Table 8.7 Primary school completion and transition to secondary school ................................................................103Table 8.8 Education gender parity ............................................................................................................................104Table 9.1 Child discipline ........................................................................................................................................... 110Table 9.2 Attitudes towards physical punishment .....................................................................................................111Table 9.3 Attitudes towards domestic violence: Women.......................................................................................... 112Table 9.4 Attitudes towards domestic violence: Men ............................................................................................... 114Table 10.1 Exposure to mass media ...........................................................................................................................120Table 10.2 Use of computers and Internet .................................................................................................................121Table 11.1 Domains of life satisfaction: Women .........................................................................................................126Table 11.2 Domains of life satisfaction: Men ..............................................................................................................128Table 11.3 Happiness ..................................................................................................................................................129Table 11.4 Perception of a better life ..........................................................................................................................130 LIST OF FIGURES Figure 3.1 Age and sex distribution of population ........................................................................................................14Figure 3.2 Education level of mothers of children under 5 years of age ......................................................................18Figure 5.1 Distribution of household population with piped water in the dwelling by wealth quintiles .......................34Figure 6.1 Proportion of infants weighing less than 2,500 grams at birth ...................................................................42Figure 6.2 Children under 5 years of age who are stunted in Roma settlements ........................................................46Figure 6.3 Mothers who started breastfeeding within one hour and within one day of birth......................................47Figure 6.4 Infant feeding patterns by age, Serbia .........................................................................................................51Figure 6.5 Infant feeding patterns by age in Roma settlements, Serbia ......................................................................51Figure 6.6 Proportion of children under 5 years of age with diarrhoea who received ORT or increased fluids and continued feeding .................................................................................................................................56Figure 6.7 Coverage of interventions across the continuum of care in Roma settlements, Bosnia and Herzegovina ..............................................................................................................................72Figure 6.8 Coverage of interventions across the continuum of care in Roma settlements, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia .................................................................................................................73Figure 6.9 Coverage of interventions across the continuum of care in Roma settlements, Serbia .............................73Figure 7.1 Literacy-numeracy by support for learning and learning materials ..............................................................89Figure 7.2 Early Childhood Development Index by support for learning and learning materials ..................................91Figure 8.1 Literacy by wealth .......................................................................................................................................95Figure 8.2 Household members aged 524 years attending school, by gender, in Bosnia and Herzegovina ............105Figure 8.3 Household members aged between 524 years attending school, by gender, in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia ...................................................................................................105Figure 8.4 Household members aged 524 years attending school, by gender, in Serbia.........................................106 xx THE RIGHTS OF ROMA CHILDREN AND WOMEN AIDS Acquired Immune Deficiency SyndromeBIH Bosnia and HerzegovinaCEDAW Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women CEE/CIS Central and Eastern Europe/Commonwealth of Independent StatesCERD Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial DiscriminationCOE Council of EuropeCRC Convention on the Rights of the ChildCRPD Convention on the Rights of Persons with DisabilitiesDEC Development and Education Centres (Serbia) ECD early child developmentECDI Early Childhood Development IndexECHR European Convention on Human RightsEU European UnionFYROM The former Yugoslav Republic of MacedoniaGDP gross domestic product GPI gender parity indexICCPR International Covenant on Civil and Political RightsICESCR International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights ICT Information and communication technologyIECD Integrated Early Childhood Development (Centres)MDG Millennium Development Goal (initiative of the United Nations)MICS Multiple Indicator Cluster SurveysNAR net attendance ratioNGO non-governmental organizations OECD Organisation for Economic Co-operation and DevelopmentORS oral rehydration solutionORT oral rehydration treatmentPPP Preparatory Preschool Programme (Serbia) REA Roma education assistants (Serbia) REP Roma Education Programme (The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia)RHF Recommended home fluidRTA Roma teaching assistants (Serbia) SRB SerbiaUN United NationsUNDP United Nations Development ProgrammeUNICEF United Nations Childrens FundWHO World Health Organization ACRONYMS AND ABBREvIATIONS xxI This study aims to support duty bearers in meeting their obligations, and all children particularly Roma children in claiming their rights. xxII THE RIGHTS OF ROMA CHILDREN AND WOMEN UNICEF/CEECIS2013P-0345/Piroz xxIII INTRODUCTION / THE RIGHTS OF ROMA CHILDREN AND WOMEN and young people are necessary to contribute to the overarching objectives of social cohesion and sustainable development enshrined in the Europe 2020 Strategy. All countries in Europe have formally committed to protecting and promoting the rights of children, identified primarily in the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) and reinforced in the A World Fit for Children commitments and in all other human rights conventions, in particular the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (CERD), the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). At the regional level, the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) enshrines and protects human rights and fundamental freedoms in 47 States parties, all members of the COE. Furthermore, since 2009, the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (EU Charter) binds all EU institutions and member States when they act within the scope of EU law (i.e., when they implement EU legislation domestically, to respect and promote the rights, freedoms and principles set out for all EU citizens and residents). The CRC is a universally agreed-upon set of non-negotiable standards and obligations establishing minimum entitlements and freedoms for all children that should be respected by States parties. These rights are founded on respect for the dignity and worth of each individual, regardless of race, colour, gender, language, religion, opinions, origins, wealth, birth status or ability, and they apply to every human being. With rights comes the obligation on the part of governments and individuals not to infringe upon the parallel rights of others. The human rights of children are both interdependent and indivisible. Achieving
Article
31 Май 2021
Making the European Child Guarantee a Reality. Insights from testing the European Child Guarantee
https://www.unicef.org/eca/stories/making-european-child-guarantee-reality-insights-testing-european-child-guarantee
MARGARETA MADERIC State Secretary, Ministry of Labour, the Pension System, the Family and Social Policy European Union Margareta Mađerić was born on 2 July 1977 in Zagreb. After finishing high school, she enrolled in Zagreb School of Business where she obtained her bachelor’s degree in Marketing and Communication and worked as a marketing and communications manager before entering into politics. In 2005, as a member of Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ), Mađerić was elected to the Zagreb City Assembly, where she served three consecutive terms and served as president of the Deputy Club of the Croatian Democratic Union. In the 2013 local elections in Zagreb, she ran as the HDZ candidate for mayor, and in the 2015 Croatian parliamentary elections, Mađerić ran as a candidate for the Patriotic Coalition, led by the HDZ. She was a member of the Croatian Parliament and was named president of the Parliamentary committee for mandates and immunity, before she assumed the position of State Secretary in the Ministry for Demography, Family, Youth and Social policy. Following the 2020 parliamentary elections she continued to serve as State Secretary in the new Ministry of Labour, Pension system, Family and Social Policy. SAILA RUUTH Personal archive
Report
01 Январь 2014
Realizing the rights of Roma children and women in three countries
https://www.unicef.org/eca/reports/realizing-rights-roma-children-and-women-three-countries
1 unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis Introduction Across Europe, many Roma boys and girls, young men and women experience extreme poverty, social exclusion and discrimination. They are disadvantaged and marginalised through not being registered, low levels of parental education, low participation in early childhood care and education at all levels, and limited access to health care services, employment, water and sanitation and social services. Their exclusion is often driven by poverty, limited opportunities for participation in decisions affecting their lives, discrimination in the labour market, in public services and in society, spatial segregation, and lack of sustainable well-funded policies to change the course of these trends. The lack of information on Roma communities, especially children, young people and women, hinders the development of effective social inclusion policies. In response, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Serbia are taking crucial steps to end Roma exclusion, by monitoring progress and developing policies to prevent discrimination. These bold initiatives set a valuable example for other countries to follow. Drawing on these efforts, the UNICEF Regional Office for Central and Eastern Europe/Commonwealth of Independent States (CEE/CIS) has produced a study on the situation of Roma children and women in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and Serbia to find out how Roma children fare in comparison to non-Roma and where positive progress has been made in social inclusion. This study fills a major gap in available research and disaggregated data on Roma children, young people and women. Improving Roma lives requires a human rights-based approach. All countries in Europe have formally committed to protecting and promoting the rights of all children and women, identified in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), and reinforced in the United Nations General Assemblys A World Fit for Children commitments and other human rights conventions, in particular the Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW). The study aims to support duty-bearers governments, civil society and individuals in meeting their obligations, and all children and women particularly Roma children and women to claim their rights. Realizing the rights of Roma children and womenin Bosnia and Herzegovina, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and SerbiaSummary analysis of key findings from MICS surveys in Roma settlements in the three countries INSIGHTS: CHILD RIGHTS IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE AND CENTRAL ASIA ISSUE 2 / 2014 2 Realizing the rights of Roma children and women unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis 1. Birth registration: a ticket to life that all Roma children must get Every child has the right to a name, a nationality and an identity (CRC Articles 7 and 8). Birth registration for every child at or shortly after birth is the means of securing these rights. The lack of birth registration denies Roma children the chance of participating in vaccination programmes and having regular health check-ups, and hinders access to early childhood development services, education and social benefits. The study assesses the situation of Roma children and women across the main areas of social inclusion, corresponding to the key rights enshrined in the CRC: birth registration, participation in early childhood care and development, access to health care services, access to education at all levels, living standards, child protection and access to information. This edition of Insights presents the key findings for some of these topics. More details can be found in the full report of the study. Based on the results of this research, UNICEF recommends the following priority actions: Address malnutrition affecting young Roma children during their first two years of life; Expand supply of quality inclusive early childhood education and learning for children between 3 years and compulsory school age, and family support services to encourage equally shared parenting; Improve the quality and inclusiveness of primary and secondary education, particularly for Roma girls and women; Secure for Roma girls and women access to quality inclusive health care services and information; and Address the material deprivation and income poverty of Roma households, in particular of Roma women. Study methodology The study is based on data from the Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS) carried out in Bosnia and Herzegovina (2011-2012), the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (2011), and Serbia (2010). The MICS provide information on the situation of children, women and men, focusing mainly on health, education, child development and child protection. The MICS enable monitoring of progress towards the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and are comparable internationally. The study mainly uses MICS data from Roma settlements which are compared with national averages. The term non-Roma in this brief is used interchangeably with national average and nationally, considering the very low proportion of Roma in the national population of each of the three countries. UNICEF CEECIS/2011/Mcconnico Organized services for the early ages can enable mothers, fathers and other carers to pursue personal and societal goals. 4 Realizing the rights of Roma children and women unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis 2. Early childhood development: a life-long investment for every Roma child Every child has the right to life and the best possible health (CRC Articles 6, 18 and 24). Governments must ensure that Roma children survive and thrive by providing services to support both mothers and fathers in caring for and raising their children. Exposure to risk factors, such as poverty and non-stimulating environments, in the early years can have lifelong consequences. From pre-natal to 3 years of age, emotions are shaped, physical health established and social skills and cognitive-linguistic capacities developed. Appropriate attention to ECD can help to prevent social exclusion and poverty before it starts by ensuring that all children have the best possible nurturing and responsive care and protection from birth. Access to early childhood education services is essential in providing all children, and particularly the most disadvantaged, an even start as they enter primary school. Organised care services can also enable mothers, fathers and other carers to pursue personal and societal goals in the education system, labour market and community.The engagement of both mothers and fathers in activities with children such as, reading books to infants promotes language and cognitive skills. The Early Childhood Development Index (ECDI) represents the proportion of children who are developmentally on track in at least three of four principal developmental domains: physical growth, literacy and numeracy skills, social-emotional development and readiness to learn. Key Findings. Over 98 per cent of Roma children under 5 years of age are registered in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Serbia, and just below 96 per cent in Bosnia and Herzegovina. But this leaves 2-4 per cent who are not. Delays in birth registration are common: in Bosnia and Herzegovina only 91 per cent of children under 1 year of age are registered. A high proportion of Roma mothers who say registration has taken place are unable to produce a birth certificate (more commonly in the poorest households): from 20 per cent in Bosnia and Herzegovina to over 35 per cent in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Serbia. The mothers education and household wealth can determine whether a child has a birth certificate: in Serbia, 14 per cent of Roma children of mothers without education and 15 per cent of children in the poorest households do not have a birth certificate. INSIGHTS 5 unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis Key Findings. Roma childrens life chances are threatened from an early age, due to limited early development opportunities: There are few children who participate in early childhood education in the three countries, even fewer Roma: in Bosnia and Herzegovina, less than 2 per cent of Roma children aged 3 to 4 years attend (13 per cent nationally), in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia 4 per cent and in Serbia 8 per cent (22 and 44 per cent nationally, respectively). Household wealth and parents education affect attendance: in Serbia, one in four Roma children whose mother attended secondary school or higher and only 6 per cent of children whose mothers received no education, attend early education. Roma young boys are slightly more likely to attend early childhood education than young girls in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, while there is no observed gender difference in the other two countries. Roma children aged 3 to 4 years have less interaction with parents than non-Roma children: less than 70 per cent of Roma parents engage with their children in all countries (over 90 per cent among non-Roma). Fathers engagement is also lower among the Roma than non-Roma. When the mother has at least primary education, the rate is higher: over 70 per cent in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia compared to 50 per cent or below without education. Roma children under 5 years of age have less access to books than non-Roma children: only one in ten Roma households in Bosnia and Herzegovina has at least three childrens books and less than one in four in the other countries (compared to over half in national samples and 76 per cent in Serbia). Wealth and education levels are crucial: the poorest Roma households in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia are about seven times less likely to have books than the wealthiest (2 to 16 per cent and 8 to 49 per cent respectively). Roma young children aged 3 to 4 years score lower on the Early Childhood Development Index (ECDI) than non-Roma: from 72 per cent (the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia) and 88 per cent (Serbia) to 93 and 96 per cent for non-Roma, respectively (Figure 1). Roma young girls score higher than boys in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (79 and 66 per cent respectively) while there is no or a very small difference in the other two countries. A significant correlation between stunting and ECDI exists among Roma children in Serbia. Physical growth and learning indicators are high among Roma children, but literacy and numeracy are much lower than among non-Roma children: about 98 per cent of Roma children aged from 3 to 4 years are on target physically and over 90 per cent on target for learning in all countries. Literacy-numeracy levels of Roma children are low, one-third the rate of non-Roma children. In the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Roma girls have a lower score than boys in literacy-numeracy (12 and 19 per cent). In all countries there is no significant difference between Roma boys and girls in physical growth and learning indicators. 6 Realizing the rights of Roma children and women unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis 3. Health: securing a virtuous cycle of good health for Roma children and mothers Every child has the right to the best possible health and the CRC requires States to ensure that no child is deprived of the right of access health care services. (CRC Article 24). The cycle of deprivation for a disadvantaged child begins with the mothers poor health and nutrition, which can determine the health at birth of the child and the environment in which the child grows up. Governments can end this cycle by providing quality health care, services to prevent malnutrition, clean water and a clean environment for all families throughout their lives. 3.1 Reproductive health All women have the right to access health care services, including those related to reproductive health, throughout their lives (CEDAW Article 12). The CEDAW (Article 16) also requires States to ensure that women and men have the same right to enter into marriage with free and full consent, to freely choose a spouse, and to decide freely and responsibly on the number and spacing of children, including access to the information, education and means to enable such choices. Early marriage and early childbearing can be an underlying cause of poor health among women and children, which may also hamper attendance to school. A lack of proof of age, the lack or lax enforcement of laws on child marriage, and customs and religious practices put children at risk of early marriage. The age at which girls and boys become sexually active also carries health risks. Pregnancy-related deaths are the leading cause of mortality among 15 to 19-year-old Figure 1. Differences in 4 components of early childhood development index (ECDI) between Roma and non-Roma children (per cent of children age 36-59 months who are developmentally on track in literacy-numeracy, physical, social-emotional, and learning domains) 100 90 Per cent Bosnia and Herzegovina Roma Settlements Bosnia and Herzegovina The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Roma Settlements The former YugoslavRepublic of Macedonia Serbia Roma Settlements Serbia 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Lite racy -nu mer acy Phys ical Soci al-e mot iona lLe arni ngEC DI Lite racy -nu mer acy Phys ical Soci al-e mot iona lLe arni ngEC DI Lite racy -nu mer acy Phys ical Soci al-e mot iona lLe arni ngEC DI Lite racy -nu mer acy Phys ical Soci al-e mot iona lLe arni ngEC DI Lite racy -nu mer acy Phys ical Soci al-e mot iona lLe arni ngEC DI Lite racy -nu mer acy Phys ical Soci al-e mot iona lLe arni ngEC DI 8 98 86 99 85 25 100 95 99 96 16 98 72 92 72 43 100 91 99 93 11 99 89 98 88 31 100 94 99 94 Whiskers indicate the 95 per cent confidence interval.Source: UNICEF Regional Office for CEE/CIS, The rights of Roma children and women: A comparative review and further analysis of findings of MICS surveys in Roma settlements in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, forthcoming in 2014. INSIGHTS 7 unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis girls worldwide and those under 15 years are five times more likely to die than women in their twenties. If a mother is under 18 years, her babys chances of dying in the first year of life are 60 per cent higher than for a baby born to an older mother. The risk of maternal mortality is high during labour and delivery in the antenatal period and also in the delivery and in the immediate post-partum period. The place of delivery, hygienic conditions and medical attention from skilled staff during delivery are critical in reducing risks. Children and adolescents are particularly vulnerable to HIV because of their age, biology and, often, legal status. They must know where to be tested for HIV, what their HIV status is and how to seek treatment. Antenatal care is a crucial opportunity for HIV prevention and care, in particular for HIV transmission from mother to child. Key Findings. Roma women and girls are more vulnerable to reproductive health issues than non-Roma. Significant improvements have been made in terms of birth delivered at public health facilities which are assisted by skilled attendants. Roma women are more likely to be married before the age of 15 years than non-Roma women and Roma men: 15-16 per cent of Roma women aged 15-49 years in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia and 12 per cent in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia were married before age 15, compared to around 1 per cent nationally. Half of Roma women aged 20-24 years are married before the age of 18 years in all countries (compared to around 10 per cent nationally). Early marriage is more common for women with a low level of education and from the poorest households. Roma women are much more likely to be married before age 15 or 18 than Roma men in all three countries. Early childbearing is more frequent among Roma girls: 40 per cent of 15 to 19-year-olds Roma girls in Serbia had a live birth or were pregnant with a first child, but only 4 per cent among non-Roma (31 of Roma women in Bosnia and Herzegovina; and 18 in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia). Roma women with no education have the highest rate: almost half of women in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia have had a live birth, compared with 6 per cent with secondary education or higher in Bosnia and Herzegovina and 15 per cent in Serbia. Roma women are less likely to receive HIV counselling and to be offered HIV testing as part of antenatal care than non-Roma women: 2 per cent of Roma women aged 15-24 years who gave birth in the previous two years in Bosnia and Herzegovina and 4 per cent in Serbia received HIV counselling during antenatal care (above 11 per cent nationally in both countries). No Roma women in Bosnia and Herzegovina and 1 per cent of Roma women in Serbia were offered an HIV test, were tested for HIV and received the results during antenatal care (compared to 5 per cent in Bosnia and Herzegovina and 8 per cent in Serbia nationally). Knowledge on places where HIV tests can be carried out is lower among Roma than non-Roma, with wider knowledge among Roma men than Roma women: 23 per cent of Roma women aged 15-24 years in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and 27 per cent in Serbia know about a place to get tested, compared to 70 per cent nationally in both countries. 8 Realizing the rights of Roma children and women unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis Differences exist also between Roma and non-Roma men: around 70 per cent of men nationally in both countries know a place to get tested compared to 51 per cent of Roma men in Bosnia and Herzegovina and 32 per cent in Serbia. For both Roma women and men the level of knowledge is especially low among the poorest and those who have no education: Roma women with no education and those from the poorest households have the lowest levels of knowledge. The use of modern methods of contraception is low among married Roma women aged 15-49 years in all countries: Serbia has the lowest, at 6 per cent (22 per cent nationally). The proportion of Roma women who use any method of contraception is lowest in Bosnia and Herzegovina at 25 per cent (46 nationally). Unmet need is also higher among Roma women (28 per cent in Bosnia and Herzegovina: three times the national average of 9 per cent). Roma women are less likely to receive antenatal care visits by skilled personnel in all countries (Figure 2): only 62 per cent of Roma women in Bosnia and Herzegovina who gave birth during the two years preceding the survey received the minimum number of four visits (84 per cent nationally), with 86 per cent in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (94 per cent nationally). The educational level of mothers is linked, as is wealth status of the household. There are no differences between Roma and non-Roma in terms of the place of delivery and presence of a skilled attendant: 99 per cent of births took place in a public health facility with a skilled attendant in all three countries for Roma and non-Roma alike. 100 90 Per cent 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Bosnia and Herzegovina Roma Settlements 21 Wom en w ho h adno ant enat alca re v isits Wom en w ho h ad4 or m ore visi ts Bosnia and Herzegovina Wom en w ho h ad4 or m ore visi ts Wom en w ho h adno ant enat alca re v isits The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Roma Settlements Wom en w ho h adno ant enat alca re v isits Wom en w ho h ad4 or m ore visi ts The former YugoslavRepublic of Macedonia Wom en w ho h ad4 or m ore visi ts Wom en w ho h adno ant enat alca re v isits Serbia Roma Settlements Wom en w ho h adno ant enat alca re v isits Wom en w ho h ad4 or m ore visi ts Serbia Wom en w ho h ad4 or m ore visi ts Wom en w ho h adno ant enat alca re v isits 62 136 16 72 1 8694 94 84 Figure 2. Differences in antenatal care coverage between Roma and non-Roma women (per cent of women aged 15-49 years who had a live birth during the previous two years, by number of antenatal care visits by any provider) Source: UNICEF Regional Office for CEE/CIS, The rights of Roma children and women: A comparative review and further analysis of findings of MICS surveys in Roma settlements in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, forthcoming in 2014. INSIGHTS 9 unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis 3.2 Nutrition A newborns weight at birth is a good indicator of a mothers health and nutritional status as well as of her or his chances for survival, growth, long-term health and psychosocial development. Low birth weight is a significant risk factor and is associated with poor child development outcomes. Breastfeeding for the first few years of life protects children from infection, helps growth and provides an ideal source of nutrients; stopping breastfeeding too soon might entail severe consequences for the child. Undernourished children are more likely to die from common childhood ailments and have faltering growth. Stunting reflects chronic malnutrition and, if not treated during the first two years of life, the impact on physical and cognitive development is largely irreversible. Wasting is usually the result of a recent nutritional deficiency. Figure 3. Differences in weight at birth (per cent of last live-born children in the last two years weighing less than 2500 grams at birth) Whiskers indicate the 95 per cent confidence interval.Source: UNICEF Regional Office for CEE/CIS, The rights of Roma children and women: A comparative review and further analysis of findings of MICS surveys in Roma settlements in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, forthcoming in 2014. 18 Per cent 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0Bosnia and Herzegovina Roma Settlements Bosnia andHerzegovina The formerYugoslav Republic ofMacedonia RomaSettlements The formerYugoslav Republic ofMacedonia SerbiaRoma Settlements Serbia 14 3 11 6 10 5 Key Findings. Disparities exist in nutrition between Roma and non-Roma children, with differences between girls and boys in the case of meal frequency, but there are positive indicators on breastfeeding: Roma infants are more likely to have low birth weight than non-Roma in all countries (above 10 per cent, Figure 3): in Bosnia and Herzegovina the proportion of low birth weight Roma infants is over four times that of non-Roma (14 per cent compared to 3 per cent). Household wealth is a determining factor. Roma children under 5 years of age are more likely to be underweight, wasted and stunted than non-Roma children in all countries (Figure 4): the proportion of underweight Roma children is more than four times higher than non-Roma in all three countries. One in five Roma children in Bosnia and Herzegovina and one in four in Serbia are moderately or severely stunted (less than one in ten nationally). The proportion of wasted children is higher among Roma children and highest in Bosnia and Herzegovina, affecting one in five 6-11 months-old infants. A mothers education and household wealth is linked to underweight children, and wealth also to stunting. The proportion of Roma babies being breastfed for the first time within one hour of birth is low, but higher than nationally in all three countries: half of Roma babies in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 39 per cent in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia but 10 per cent in Serbia. The proportion of Roma children breastfed within one hour is higher 10 Realizing the rights of Roma children and women unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis in all countries than nationally. Similarly differences are observed with breastfeeding within one day (apart from Bosnia and Herzegovina where Roma and non-Roma are almost the same) and duration of breastfeeding. Roma children are exclusively breastfed more commonly than non-Roma in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and predominant breastfeeding is more prevalent in all countries. Continued breastfeeding at 1 year of age is higher for Roma children in all three countries, as is breastfeeding up to 2 years of age: 40 per cent are appropriately breastfed for their age compared to 18 per cent nationally in Bosnia and Herzegovina and 43 per cent compared to 22 per cent in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. The proportion of Roma children aged 6-23 months receiving the minimum number of recommended meals per day is lower than national averages: 60 per cent (72 per cent nationally) and 72 per cent (84 per cent nationally) of Roma children in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia, respectively, were getting meals the minimum number of recommended times. Gender inequalities in minimum meal frequency are high in Roma settlements in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia where only 56 per cent of Roma girls were achieving the minimum meal frequency compared to 69 per cent of Roma boys (gender inequalities are similarly observed at the national level). Figure 4. Comparison of anthropometric indicators between Roma and non-Roma children (per cent of underweight, stunted, wasted and overweight children under the age of 5) Whiskers indicate the 95 per cent confidence interval.Source: UNICEF Regional Office for CEE/CIS, The rights of Roma children and women: A comparative review and further analysis of findings of MICS surveys in Roma settlements in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, forthcoming in 2014. Per cent Bosnia andHerzegovina Roma Settlements Bosnia andHerzegovina The formerYugoslav Republic of MacedoniaRoma Settlements The formerYugoslav Republic of Macedonia SerbiaRoma Settlements Serbia Und erw eigh tSt unte dW aste dO verw eigh t Und erw eigh tSt unte dW aste dO verw eigh t Und erw eigh tSt unte dW aste dO verw eigh t Und erw eigh tSt unte dW aste dO verw eigh t Und erw eigh tSt unte dW aste dO verw eigh t Und erw eigh tSt unte dW aste dO verw eigh t 30 25 20 15 10 5 09 21 8 8 29 2 17 8 17 5 51 5 2 12 7 5 13242 7 4 16 UNICEF CEECIS/2011/Mcconnico Educated, informed and healthy girls and women are empowered to pursue their goals, transform their families and communities. 12 Realizing the rights of Roma children and women unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis 3.3 Child health As children grow up, many die unnecessarily due to a lack of immunization and prevention/treatment of pneumonia and diarrhoea. Pneumonia is the leading cause of death in children and diarrhoea the second leading cause of death among children under 5 years of age worldwide. Both can be prevented or treated. 3.4 Continuum of care The concept of continuum of care is an integrated approach recognising that the health and well-being of women, newborns and children are closely linked and should be managed in a unified way. The concept promotes care for mothers and children from pregnancy to delivery, in the immediate postnatal period and into childhood, recognising that safe childbirth is critical to the health of both the mother and child. It focuses particularly on the highly vulnerable maternal, newborn and child health periods. Key Findings. Roma children, equally girls and boys, do not receive adequate disease prevention and treatment services: Roma children aged 18-29 months are less likely to be immunized than non-Roma children in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (data not collected for Serbia). Coverage tends to decrease for the second and third dose of all repetitive vaccinations. In Bosnia and Herzegovina only 4 per cent of Roma children had all the recommended vaccinations, compared with 68 per cent among non-Roma children. Diarrhoea is more common among Roma children in all countries: 13-15 per cent of Roma children under 5 experienced diarrhoea (within two weeks prior to the survey and as reported by mothers) compared to 6-8 per cent for non-Roma. Treatment differs, with Roma children given less to drink during diarrhoea, most strikingly in Bosnia and Herzegovina with 64 per cent for Roma and 16 per cent for non-Roma. Roma children also receive less food afterwards and less oral rehydration treatment. Roma mothers are less likely to recognise the danger signs of pneumonia in all countries: knowledge is highest in Serbia (16 per cent of Roma mothers recognised the signs compared to 26 per cent nationally) and lowest in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (3 per cent compared to 6 per cent nationally). INSIGHTS 13 unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis Key Findings. The majority of Roma and non-Roma children and mothers are well covered with skilled attendance at delivery and improved water sources and sanitation (Figure 5), however, For Roma women and children the most important gaps in coverage are in the pre-pregnancy, postnatal and infancy periods: The pre-pregnancy period is marked by low contraceptive prevalence rates both for Roma and non-Roma women while Roma children are slightly better off in terms of exclusive breastfeeding and complementary feeding. The most important disparities between Roma and non-Roma across the continuum of health care are seen in antenatal care and immunisation coverage: these gaps are considerable in Bosnia and Herzegovina compared to the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Serbia. Figure 5. Coverage of interventions across the continuum of care in Roma settlements Note: Arrow heads are data points representing national figures.Whiskers indicate the 95 per cent confidence interval.Source: UNICEF Regional Office for CEE/CIS, The rights of Roma children and women: A comparative review and further analysis of findings of MICS surveys in Roma settlements in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, forthcoming in 2014. Bosnia and Herzegovina Roma Settlements The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Roma Settlements Serbia Roma Settlements Pre-pregnancy Pregnancy Birth Postnatal Infancy Childhood Con trace ptiv e pr eval ence rate At l east one ant enat al v isit At l east four ant enat al v isits Ski lled atte ndan t at d eliv ery Ear ly in itiat ion of b reas tfeed ing Exc lusi ve b reas tfeed ing Com plem enta ry fe edin g Mea sles imm unis atio n DP T3 im mun isat ion Car esee king for p neum onia Ant ibio tics for p neum onia Dia rrho ea tr eatm ent Impr oved san itatio n fa cilit ies Impr oved drin king wat er 100 90 Per cent 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 no d ata colle cted no d ata colle cted 25 37 64 79 94 95 62 86 72 62 100 100 50 39 10 22 32 9 46 46 41 80 76 92 75 69 91 52 53 60 73 91 85 97 99 9813 7822 89 14 Realizing the rights of Roma children and women unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis 4. Education: harnessing the greatest opportunity to transform a Roma childs life A childs right to education is based on equal opportunity and aims at promoting the fullest possible development of all girls and boys, without discrimination on any ground. (CRC Article 28). Education equips girls and boys, women and men with the qualifications and skills needed for a self-sufficient, productive and satisfactory life. It is a vital prerequisite for combating poverty, realizing human rights and democracy, promoting gender equality, and protecting the environment. All children must be able to realise their right through access to quality education and to be treated with respect at school. Girl and boys can be restricted from attending school due to segregation, language barriers, distance from school, lack of identity papers, and lack of money to pay for school clothes and equipment and fear of stigma. Limited access to education can often begin at the pre-school stage and then continue throughout a childs school years. 4.1 School readiness Quality pre-school education is important for childrens development and to prepare them for formal school education (see Section 2). Even when pre-schools are available, take-up can often be limited due to lack of transport from remote settlements or unaffordable costs. 4.2 Primary and secondary school participation For children who have limited access to education from the pre-school level onwards, making the transition to the next level can be challenging. Even when enrolled disadvantaged children risk having to endure poor quality, under-resourced, segregated facilities, with a curriculum that does not recognise or promote multiple languages and cultures, and discrimination from peers and teachers. Early marriage and childbirth can curtail opportunities for girls. Key findings. Access of Roma to pre-school education largely depends on the national pre-school system: The proportion of Roma children attending first grade of primary school who had attended pre-school is very low: in Bosnia and Herzegovina only 4 per cent currently attending first grade attended pre-school the previous year (16 per cent nationally). The highest attendance levels for Roma are in Serbia at 78 per cent (97 per cent nationally), where one pre-primary year is compulsory, free of charge and available country-wide. There were no observed differences between girls and boys in the three countries. INSIGHTS 15 unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis Key findings. The lack of access to education for Roma children continues at all levels, with lower participation rates for Roma girls from age 12 onwards: Roma children of primary school age are less likely to enter the first grade of primary school than non-Roma children: in Bosnia and Herzegovina only 47 per cent enter the first grade (83 per cent nationally), while the figure is 84 per cent (91 per cent nationally) in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and 91 per cent (95 per cent nationally) in Serbia. However, the proportion of female children who enter the first grade in Bosnia and Herzegovina is higher than that of males. Fewer Roma children attend primary school than non-Roma children: in Bosnia and Herzegovina only 69 per cent; in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, 86 per cent, and in Serbia, 89 per cent (compared to around 98 per cent nationally in all three countries). Roma children are less likely to complete primary school than non-Roma (Figure 6): around two-thirds of Roma children complete primary school in all countries (around 100 per cent nationally), while the transition rate is 80 per cent or less in all (over 97 per cent nationally). Fewer Roma children attend secondary school than non-Roma children: in Serbia only 19 per cent (compared to 89 per cent of non-Roma children); in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 23 per cent (compared to 92 per cent), and in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, 39 per cent (compared to 86 per cent). Attendance among Roma boys is higher than Roma girls in secondary school (Figure 7): while Roma boys and girls attending primary school in equal numbers, in all countries a gender gap emerges after the age of 12 and gets irreversibly wider from age 15. Such gender inequalities are not seen nationally. Figure 6. Primary school completion and transition to secondary school Whiskers indicate the 95 per cent confidence interval.Source: UNICEF Regional Office for CEE/CIS, The rights of Roma children and women: A comparative review and further analysis of findings of MICS surveys in Roma settlements in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, forthcoming in 2014. 160 140 Per cent 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 Bosnia and Herzegovina Roma Settlements Prim ary scho olco mpl etio n ra teTr ansi tion rate tose cond ary scho ol Bosnia and Herzegovina Tran sitio n ra te to seco ndar y sc hool Prim ary scho olco mpl etio n ra te The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Roma Settlements Prim ary scho olco mpl etio n ra teTr ansi tion rate tose cond ary scho ol The former YugoslavRepublic of Macedonia Tran sitio n ra te to seco ndar y sc hool Prim ary scho olco mpl etio n ra te Serbia Roma Settlements Prim ary scho olco mpl etio n ra teTr ansi tion rate tose cond ary scho ol Serbia Tran sitio n ra te to seco ndar y sc hool Prim ary scho olco mpl etio n ra te 71 146 67 97 6368 104 80 98 9897 73 16 Realizing the rights of Roma children and women unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis Figure 7. Education gender parity in secondary school (ratio of adjusted net attendance ratios of girls to boys) NAR: net attendance ratioWhiskers indicate the 95 per cent confidence interval.Source: UNICEF Regional Office for CEE/CIS, The rights of Roma children and women: A comparative review and further analysis of findings of MICS surveys in Roma settlements in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, forthcoming in 2014. 100 90 Per cent 80 70 60 50 40 20 30 10 0 Bosnia and Herzegovina Roma Settlements Seco ndar y sc hool adju sted NAR : Girl sSe cond ary scho ol adju sted NAR : Boy s Bosnia and Herzegovina Seco ndar y sc hool adju sted NAR : Boy s Seco ndar y sc hool adju sted NAR : Girl s The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Roma Settlements Seco ndar y sc hool adju sted NAR : Girl sSe cond ary scho ol adju sted NAR : Boy s The former YugoslavRepublic of Macedonia Seco ndar y sc hool adju sted NAR : Boy s Seco ndar y sc hool adju sted net atte ndan cera tio: G irls Serbia Roma Settlements Seco ndar y sc hool adju sted NAR : Girl sSe cond ary scho ol adju sted NAR : Boy s Serbia Seco ndar y sc hool adju sted NAR : Boy s Seco ndar y sc hool adju sted NAR : Girl s 27 93 35 84 17 23 9044 87 889018 4.3 Literacy among young women and men Literacy is a fundamental human right of women and men, the foundation for lifelong learning and an instrument of empowerment to improve ones health, well-being, income and relationship with wider society. For women in particular, literacy is essential to bolstering their productive, entrepreneurial, community and societal roles. The education and literacy levels of parents, mothers in particular, determine a childs survival, growth and development prospects. Key findings. Young Roma women are more likely to have lower literacy rates than young Roma men and non-Roma: Roma women have lower literacy levels than non-Roma women: less than 80 per cent of Roma women aged 15-24 are literate in all countries (compared with almost 100 per cent nationally). Bosnia and Herzegovina has the lowest rate at 69 per cent. Literacy is much higher among men, both Roma and non-Roma. The majority of young Roma women with no education are illiterate: over 80 per cent in all countries. Wealth status plays a key role in literacy (Figure 8): only half of Roma women in the poorest households in all countries are literate, compared to around 90 per cent of the richest. However, literacy rates for Roma women from the richest quintiles are still lower than the female and male literacy rates nationally. INSIGHTS 17 unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis 5. Living standards: improving the conditions in which Roma children grow up All children need a standard of living adequate for their physical, mental, spiritual, moral and social development, and have a right to access to clean drinking water (CRC article 27 and 24). The CRC establishes the primary responsibility of parents or other formal carers, but with a clear accountability of States to provide assistance where adequate standards cannot be met by primary carers solely. Lower income levels, substandard housing and a lack of access to basic services, such as water, sanitation and safe cooking fuels can increase the risk of ill-health, especially of children and women, and a lack of a permanent home and address can mean administrative exclusion from health care. Although access to safe drinking water, water resources and sanitation facilities have improved in all three countries, the threat of waterborne diseases and contamination from unsafe drinking sources remains. Inadequate disposal of human excreta and personal hygiene can result in a variety of diseases including diarrhoea (see Section 3.3). Hand washing with water and soap is the most cost effective action to prevent diarrhoea and pneumonia in children under 5 years of age. Solid fuels wood, crops, agricultural waste, animal dung and coal when used for cooking and heating create indoor smoke and increase, for girls, boys, women and men in the household, the risk of acute respiratory illness, pneumonia, chronic obstructive lung disease, cancer, and possibly tuberculosis, asthma or cataracts, and may also lead to low birth weight of babies of pregnant women. Figure 8. Literacy by wealth and sex (per cent of the literate among women aged 15-24 by wealth quintiles and sex in Roma settlements and by sex nationally) Whiskers indicate the 95 per cent confidence interval.Source: UNICEF Regional Office for CEE/CIS, The rights of Roma children and women: A comparative review and further analysis of findings of MICS surveys in Roma settlements in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, forthcoming in 2014. 100 90 Per cent 80 70 60 50 40 20 30 10 0 Bosnia and Herzegovina Roma Settlements Wealth index quintiles Wealth index quintiles Wealth index quintiles Sex Bosnia and Herzegovina The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Roma Settlements The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Serbia Roma Settlements Serbia 77 9750P oore st Sex 90M ale 69Fe mal e 99M ale 99Fe mal e Sex Sex 78M ale 77Fe mal e 100 Mal e 99Fe mal e Sex Sex Mal e Fem ale Mal e Fem ale 62S econ d 69Th ird 79Fo urth 86R iche st 54P oore st 73S econ d 83Th ird 81Fo urth 89R iche st 49P oore st 76S econ d 76Th ird 93Fo urth 89R iche st no d ata colle cted no d ata colle cted 18 Realizing the rights of Roma children and women unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis Key findings. Roma households experience lower living standards than the non-Roma population, including in access to safe drinking water, use of improved water sources and improved sanitation: There are high rates of improved drinking water sources in all countries: equally high in Roma settlements (97 per cent) and nationally (99 per cent). Roma households are less likely to have improved sanitation than non-Roma: the rate is lowest in Bosnia and Herzegovina (73 per cent compared to 94 per cent nationally) and highest in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (91 per cent in Roma settlements and 93 per cent nationally). Only just over a third of the population in the poorest households use improved sanitation in Bosnia and Herzegovina (compared to 95 per cent of the richest). Education is also a critical factor. Roma households are less likely to have hand-washing facilities than non-Roma: 22 per cent of the poorest Roma households do not have a place for hand washing in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Water and soap are not available in 36 per cent of the poorest Roma households in Serbia. Education is a significant determinant. Solid fuels (mainly wood) are mostly used for cooking in Roma households: in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 92 per cent use solid fuels (70 per cent nationally) and 76 per cent in Serbia (32 per cent nationally). There is a link between wealth and education and solid fuel/electricity use in Roma communities in all three countries. 6. Protection: Roma children must be protected from violent discipline methods at home Children must be protected from all forms of physical or mental violence (CRC Article 19) while in the care of parents or others. Corporal or physical punishment in which physical force is used to cause pain or discomfort (such as hitting children with the hand or implement) is regarded as degrading by the Committee on the Rights of the Child (in its General Comment 13). Non-physical forms of punishment which humiliate or threaten a child are also degrading and cruel. The State is responsible for the prevention of all forms of violence against children, whether it is by State officials or by parents, carers, teachers or other children. The Committee on the Rights of the Child emphasises to individual states that no form of corporal punishment should be permitted. INSIGHTS 19 unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis Key findings. Like their peers, Roma children are at risk of being subjected to physical punishment: Similar trends concerning attitudes towards physical punishment and methods of child discipline experienced by children are observed in both Roma and non-Roma households: attitudes are influenced by social-economic disparities, and the education and wealth level of parents are the main determinants. Using physical discipline methods is more prevalent in the poorest households for both Roma and non-Roma. Roma children aged 2-14 years are subjected to physical punishment at a slightly higher rate than non-Roma children: in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Serbia four out of five Roma children are subjected to physical methods of punishment (compared to around 70 per cent among non-Roma), while in Bosnia and Herzegovina the levels are lower at 60 per cent for both. Roma boys in all three countries have a slightly higher rate of severe physical punishment than girls, while no major gender differences are observed for the other methods of punishment. SOCIAL INCLUSION FOR ROMA CHILDREN AND WOMEN: WHAT WILL IT TAKE? The findings presented in this Insights provide clear indication of the priority areas that need urgent attention from duty bearers in order for Roma children to have equal opportunities to develop and flourish as human beings: Address malnutrition affecting young Roma children during their first two years of life: investments in nutritional supplements and social protection programmes today will yield future benefits in terms of reduced healthcare costs, higher earnings, increased productivity and higher GDP. Expand supply of quality inclusive early childhood education and learning for children between 3 years and compulsory school age, and family support services to encourage equally shared parenting: nurturing, stimulating and safe environments promote optimal early childhood development and have positive lifelong effects. Quality preschool education is beneficial for child development outcomes, especially for the most disadvantaged groups, and prepares children for participation and success in basic education. Organised services for the early ages can enable mothers, fathers and other carers to pursue personal and societal goals in the education system, labour market and community. 20 Realizing the rights of Roma children and women unite for childrenwww.unicef.org/ceecis CreditsInsights Issue 2/2014 was written by Anthony Burnett, with contributions by Ana Abdelbasit. Editing was by Elena Gaia and Siraj Mahmudlu, from the UNICEF Regional Office for CEE/CIS. The design was by Yudi Rusdia and lay out by Services Concept. To download the issue, please go to http://www.unicef.org/ceecis/Insights2014_2.pdf This issue is based on the study The rights of Roma children and women: A comparative review and further analysis of findings of MICS surveys in Roma settlements in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and Serbia conducted by Aniko Bernat, commissioned by the UNICEF Regional Office for CEE/CIS and carried out with the support of the UNICEF Country Offices in the three countries. This study will be available in 2014 on http://www.unicef.org/ceecis This is the fourth edition of the Insights series of analysis published by the UNICEF Regional Office for CEE/CIS. Insights provides a focused analysis of a special aspect of child rights in the region. Readers are encouraged to reproduce materials from Insights as long as they are not sold commercially. As copyright holders, UNICEF requests due acknowledgement and kindly asks online users to link to the original URL address mentioned above. Improve the quality and inclusiveness of primary and secondary education, particularly for Roma girls and women: educated girls and women are empowered to pursue their goals, participate on equal footing with boys and men in the economic, social and political life, generate ideas and, ultimately, contribute to more dynamic communities with better quality of life. Educated girls and women are also more likely to complete school, marry later and, when they become mothers, have healthier children. The education status of the mother is the most critical determinant of child deprivations documented in this study. The timely completion of a full basic education for Roma children including pre-primary, primary and lower secondary education will bring significant social and economic returns on investment. Secure for Roma girls and women access to quality inclusive health care services and information, in particular related to family planning, counselling and prevention of sexually transmitted diseases, and in the pre-pregnancy, postnatal and infancy periods: informed and healthy girls and women are able to reach their full potential, transform their families, communities and societies, and shape future generations. Improve living standards and address income poverty of Roma households, in particular of Roma women: wealth, including its intersections with gender, is the second most common determinant of the deprivations and equity gaps documented in this study. UNICEF CEECIS/2011/Mcconnico Investments in nutrition today will yield future benefits in reduced healthcare costs. http://www.unicef.org/ceecis http://www.unicef.org/ceecis/Insights2014_2.pdf http://www.services-concept.ch
Report
25 Ноябрь 2021
Deep Dive into the European Child Guarantee – Lithuania
https://www.unicef.org/eca/reports/deep-dive-european-child-guarantee-lithuania
Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania PH OTO : DA NIJ EL SO LDO iBasis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania When citing this report, please use the following wording: UNICEF, Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania, UNICEF Europe and Central Asia Regional Office (ECARO), 2022. Authors: This policy brief has been prepared by a team led by Alina Makareviien, Project Manager and Lead Expert at PPMI. Haroldas Broaitis, PPMI Research Director, contributed to the report as a scientific advisor. The following experts have provided content on their areas of expertise: Greta Skubiejt (early childhood education and care and education), Agn Zakaraviit (health and housing), Aist Vaitkeviit (nutrition, material child poverty and social exclusion), Loes van der Graaf (administrative coordinator). Project management: Daniel Molinuevo, together with Kristina Stepanova (European Child Guarantee National Coordinator in Lithuania) and the rest of the Steering Committee of the third preparatory phase of the European Child Guarantee in Lithuania. Acknowledgements: Thanks are also due to James Nixon, language editor at PPMI, and many other experts who have shared their knowledge. UNICEF, 2022 The information and views set out are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official opinion of the European Commission and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use which may be made of the information contained therein. More information on the European Union is available at www.europa.eu. The material in this policy brief was commissioned by UNICEF ECARO in collaboration with the Lithuanian National Committee for UNICEF. UNICEF accepts no responsibility for errors. The findings, interpretations, opinions and views expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the policies or views of UNICEF. Contents 1. Introduction 01 2. Free and effective access to ECEC 03 3. Free and effective access to education 07 4. Free and effective access to health care 11 5. Effective access to healthy nutrition 15 6. Effective accesss to adequate housing 18 7. Social services and benefits in cash 21 iiBasis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania PH OTO CR ED IT: U NIC EF, SA MIR KA RA HO DA 1. Introduction Child poverty has an immediate and long-term effects on both individuals and society. Due to particular needs of children, and the limited coping capabilities tied to their specific life stage, children are impacted more acutely by poverty, particularly at an early age. Poverty and deprivation during childhood impact an individuals health, educational attainment, employability and social connections, and increase the risk of future behavioural problems. Thus, poverty and social exclusion at a young age often extend into later stages of life, perpetuating intergenerational poverty and inequalities. Childrens experiences of poverty and social exclusion depend not only on the extent of income poverty and material deprivation, but are also highly influenced by their immediate caregiving environment (e.g., family composition, foster care) and the characteristics of the local community (e.g. the level of access to public services). This policy brief contributes to the drafting of the Lithuanian National Action Plan on reducing child poverty and identifies the key challenges to achieving the goals of the European Child Guarantee in Lithuania. It provides an overview of the policies currently in place and provides recommendations ranging from improving access to free early childhood education and care (ECEC), to education, health care, healthy nutrition, , and adequate housing. This policy brief is based on the findings and recommendations identified in the deep-dive analysis and consists of five parts, each covering a different policy area. Each part comprises three sections, dealing with the main access barriers to access, policy responses and recommendations for ECEC, education, health care, nutrition and housing services for children. 1 2Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania Key messages Effective access to quality ECEC services is one of the most important factors in ensuring equality in childrens further development and academic achievements, as well as to ensuring childrens safety. Meanwhile, in Lithuania, access to ECEC remains one of the biggest challenges especially for the youngest children. Not enough places are available in public centres, and private for-profit services are very expensive. In addition, hidden costs (such as meals and transport) exist even in the public sector, thereby rendering access to ECEC especially problematic for the most vulnerable children, such as children from low-income families and families at social risk. Due to the large group sizes in public ECEC centres and a lack of learning support specialists, there is also a lack of inclusion with regard to children with SEN (Special Education Needs), disabilities, and children from minority groups. Effective access to education, first and foremost, requires equality among schools and regions within the country, which is currently lacking in Lithuania. Vulnerable children, such as children from low-income families, children from families at social risk, children in rural areas, and children from national minorities within Lithuania, receive a lower quality of education. The reason for this is that schools in rural areas and in certain parts of cities, as well as schools for national minorities, lack qualified teachers, necessary learning equipment, up-to-date books and methodologies. The issue of hidden costs also applies, particularly in relation to access to non-formal education. Meanwhile, children with SEN and disabilities do not receive quality education due to teachers lack of knowledge about working with such children, as well as a lack of adapted methodology, and a lack of learning support specialists. To reduce these barriers, all schools should be equipped with laboratories, IT equipment, highly qualified teachers, all necessary learning support specialists, up-to-date books, and adapted methodologies. Schools should also provide children with universal benefits and represent cultural diversity. Meanwhile, with regard to non-formal education, children must be provided with a wide range of activities that correspond to their individual needs and capacities, and transport should be provided for children with SEN and disabilities as well as children living in distant areas. Socio-economic disadvantages negatively influence childrens access to the healthcare system in Lithuania due to families inability to afford treatments, long waiting lists, long travel times or no means of transport, a lack of time due to parents working commitments, etc. Effective access to free healthcare requires improved access to healthcare services for the most disadvantaged groups such as children in low-income families and precarious family situations; a greater focus on children with disabilities and special needs, as well as Roma and migrant children; the development of mental health services and the improvement of after-school opportunities for childrens physical activity. A lack of effective access to healthy nutrition during infancy contributes to a range of poor health outcomes in future life, as well as impacting physical and mental well-being and cognitive functioning, and contributing to lower learning outcomes. The most vulnerable children in Lithuania are those from low-income families, families at social risk, and children living in remote rural areas. Parents with low incomes cannot afford healthy foods as these are often more expensive than less healthy alternatives. In addition, parents at social risk may lack knowledge regarding the importance of nutrition, and parents raising children in remote areas may face additional barriers of access due to a lack of transport or its cost. The most vulnerable period for children is during infancy, when they should be breastfed, and their nutrition relies on mothers awareness as well as their eating habits. Tackling barriers to access such as the affordability of healthy foods, as well as addressing unhealthy eating habits by promoting and enabling healthy eating and ensuring that all children have at least one full healthy, balanced meal per day, are therefore particularly important in tackling food insecurity for AROPE children. Housing deprivation is a much bigger issue for children living in low-income families compared with other income groups of children in Lithuania. Effective access must be ensured to adequate housing and access to housing support services needs to be improved for the most disadvantaged groups in Lithuania: children in low-income households, children of single parents, children from large families, children with disabilities, Roma and migrant children. A greater focus should be placed on improving the income situation of families in Lithuania. Social services and benefits in cash significantly improve access to ECEC, education, health care, nutrition and housing. In Lithuania, some of these benefits include universal child benefits, social benefits, the family card, and one-time COVID-19 benefit and benefits for pregnant women. Other important programmes to improve the overall situation of the most vulnerable children include the action plan for complex services for families, the child well-being programme, case management and the policy of deinstitutionalization. 3Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in LithuaniaP HO TO C RE DIT : UN ICE F 2. Free and effective access to ECEC Main challenges experienced by children regarding ECEC in LithuaniaAccess to ECEC services remains a challenge in Lithuania. As in most post-Soviet countries where policies have been shaped to support stay-at-home mothering and nuclear families, and where a clear division of gender roles exists between men and women, insufficient attention has been paid to expanding the ECEC system. Policy in Lithuania has traditionally focused on supporting the aforementioned gender roles, and inattention towards developing the ECEC system has led to a lack of available ECEC services and a lack of flexibility in those services that do exist (both in terms of working hours and the types of ECEC providers), particularly with regard to children aged 0 to 3 years old. In addition, there is insufficient inclusion and access to ECEC services for children with Special Educational Needs (SEN) and disabilities, children with migrant backgrounds and children living in families at social risk, especially when such children live in rural areas. Due to a lack of public services, parents have to rely on private for-profit services, which are very expensive. Most vulnerable families, such as single-parent families, cannot afford them. For single-parent families, the situation is extremely complicated: they may face long waiting lists for enrolment into ECEC, as most municipalities in Lithuania give priority in enrolment into ECEC to families in which both parents are registered in the same area. On top of this, even in public ECEC centres, hidden costs constitute a great burden for low-income families. Meanwhile, in many cases, families with children living in rural areas cannot afford transport to and from ECEC services. Inequality between children in the education system is therefore present from a very early age. 3 4Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania Table 1 . Number of children requiring free and effective access to ecec Vulnerable group Estimated size of the group Data source and year Children in low-income families 21.6% (38, 000) of children up to 6 years old are at risk of poverty Eurostat, 2020 Children living in families at social risk 17,430 (children of all ages) Official Statistics Portal, 2018 Children living in rural areas 50,232 Education Management Information System, 2020-2021 Children with special needs and disabilities 24,962 Education Management Information System, 2020-2021 Children with migrant backgrounds Returnee children: 976Immigrant children: 1,007 Ministry of Education and Science, 2018Official Statistics Portal, 2020 The policy responses to improve access to ECEC To improve the availability of ECEC services, the Lithuanian government has established mandatory pre-primary education. Other tools include recognizing different forms of ECEC provision, providing children with transport, free meals and more. The National Education Development Programme 2021-2030 foresees that by 2030, 95% of children between ages of 3 and the age of compulsory primary education will attend ECEC services, while 75% of children from families at social risk will attend ECEC. It is also foreseen to improve the inclusion of children with SEN. The main tools to achieve these goals include the creation of new ECEC sites (including modular kindergartens and family kindergartens), and the improvement of teachers competences via various courses and peer learning. Modular system kindergartens are flexible spaces, generally made from light construction modules, which can be easily remodelled if necessary. Family kindergartens, meanwhile, are formed when a child-raising parent takes care of other children for a certain fee, using the facilities of his or her own home. Nevertheless, while the goals of current policies are promising, there is a lack of concrete steps that need to be taken, together with a lack of financial distribution. In the current situation, access to ECEC among the most vulnerable children remains a challenge, as priorities regarding enrolment into ECEC remain based on the strengths of families, rather than their vulnerabilities, such as raising children alone, and there is a lack of transport, learning support specialists and other resources. The Description of the Requirements for Teachers qualifications foresees that at least one teacher in the childrens group should have a BA qualification; all teachers should have attended courses of at least 40 hours on working with children with SEN, disabilities, and other vulnerable backgrounds, and at least 40 hours of courses on teaching the Lithuanian language. Nevertheless, there is still a shortage of workforce in ECEC due to the professions lack of attractiveness and the lack of financing in this area. Although salaries for pre-primary teachers have been raised, ECEC teachers and learning support specialists remain among the lowest-paid professionals. To help ensure the quality of services, all ECEC centres are also provided with methodological recommendations. These recommendations include topics such as identifying childrens individual needs and improving childrens academic, artistic and social skills. Moreover, they provide information on how to approach and work with children with SEN, disabilities, migrant backgrounds, as well as children from low-income families and other vulnerable backgrounds. Meanwhile, mandatory pre-primary education for all children, and mandatory ECEC education for children from families at social risk, as well as a minimum of 5 hours mandatory provision of Lithuanian language courses for migrant children of all ages while attending ECEC, seek 5Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania to ensure childrens safety and equality. The aim of these measures is to provide children with an equal starting point when they attend primary school; however, such measures are not always carried out due to a shortage of workforce and the competences of teachers, as well as the large sizes of childrens groups. Other tools include the provision of transport, increasing the number of ECEC centres, and assessment tools for children. In addition, children from families at social risk are also provided with free meals, learning equipment, family monitoring by The Child Welfare Commission, and counselling parents regarding the benefits of ECEC. Recommendations for improving access to ECEC Make ECEC universal for children from 0 years old to the age of compulsory primary education, with priority being given to children from disadvantaged backgrounds. The current goal is to achieve universal ECEC for all children between the ages of 2 and primary education by 2025. Progressive universalism could help to reach these goals. Progressive universalism means that children from vulnerable backgrounds are given priority in terms of access to ECEC. Financial allocations could also be raised to help children from vulnerable backgrounds to access ECEC. More attention to parents and their needs. It is important to inform parents about the benefits of ECEC via families social workers and health care specialists. Outreach mechanisms could provide significant benefits in terms of involving children from vulnerable backgrounds. It is also crucial to help parents with bureaucratic processes, and to simplify these processes as much as possible. Improve the inclusion of children with SEN. Although quality ECEC has a dramatic impact on the development of children with SEN, currently only around 20% of such children attend general ECEC in Lithuania. Improving the inclusion of children with SEN requires extended training for the ECEC workforce, both during their initial studies and while working in ECEC. There is currently a lack of teacher training in this area, mainly due to a lack of financing. This should be improved. In addition, it is important to reduce the sizes of childrens groups, and to determine the number of children per teacher. Where teachers work with groups including children with SEN, those groups should contain a smaller number of children. Address issues of gender inequality and reconciliation of work and family life. ECEC services are important for removing obstacles to the employment of women, particularly single mothers, and for single parents in general. Access to ECEC contributes to gender equality by allowing greater flexibility to manage family and work-life balance for both mothers and fathers. It is important that more flexible ECEC services are made available, with different working hours, and that single parents are given priority with regard to enrolment in ECEC. Address geographical disparities. Lithuania is currently unable to ensure equal enrolment into ECEC across the country. First and foremost, increasing access to ECEC, means developing infrastructure and increasing the number of teachers. The level of provision is lower in rural areas than in urban areas, and in urban areas, fewer high-quality ECEC resources are available in poorer neighbourhoods. Clear guidelines regarding structural quality and financing must be set at national level, to avoid children suffering inequalities in conditions depending on where they are born. It is also necessary to ensure equality among ECEC providers regarding the quality of services provided to children with SEN and disabilities, and to ensure that these children receive high-quality services close to their homes. Support the ECEC workforce. As previously mentioned, more time and money should be invested into the continuous professional development of working teachers as well as teachers training. The strong connections with teacher training institutions for ECEC could be further expanded to include on-site training or mentoring for working teachers. Moreover, professional development should be embedded into the process of quality monitoring, creating a system that focuses on measuring quality, reflecting on the results, and supporting teachers in making improvements. Every teacher should receive continuous professional development training continuous training and supervision in class, as well as training on special education, psychology, and IT; teachers should be able to attend qualification courses abroad and to receive video 6Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania feedback. More attention should be focused on improving teachers salaries and the status of the teaching profession, as well as increasing diversity among teachers in ECEC centres. Set clear requirements for curriculum. Curricula need to be planned within an open framework that acknowledges and addresses the diverse interests and needs of children holistically. This should include addressing differences between boys and girls; children with SEN; children from national minorities; and children from families at social risk. While planning curricula, it is important to take into account global challenges, technological advancement, topics relating to everyday life challenges, and the identities of various ethnic minorities. Children, especially those from families at social risk, should be provided with facilities to meet their hygiene requirements, and centres should pay extra attention to the nutrition and health of such children. With regard to children with SEN and disabilities, recommendations provided by doctors and other services should be followed carefully at all times. It is also important to involve children and their parents in the process of creating curricula. Ensure that policy goals are oriented towards improving access to and the quality of ECEC. Strong public policy commitment to ECEC is important, and must be backed by a bold vision, strong plans and adequate funds. Promoting ECEC as a central priority in national education strategies and plans including clear targets, indicators and ministerial leadership can make a significant difference in terms of the political and financial importance given to the sector. Robust governance and accountability mechanisms across decentralized levels are also important in ensuring the efficient allocation and use of ECEC resources. Develop comprehensive quality monitoring. To ensure success, the monitoring and assessment framework should cover structural aspects of quality (child-staff ratio, qualification levels of staff); process quality (e.g., interaction with children, the content of activities); and outcome quality (looking at the benefits for children, families, communities and society). Monitoring needs to include assessments of the accessibility of ECEC for children living in rural areas, children from low-income and single parent families, for families at social risk, and for children from ethnically non-Lithuanian families. Furthermore, the quality of staff, price of services, curricula, governance and funding should also be monitored. General quality criteria need to be set at the highest possible levels, but should also encompass regional and local levels, and should ideally align with the EU ECEC Quality Framework. The ECEC workforce, the children themselves and their parents should all be empowered and included into the quality monitoring process. Information from both self-assessment and external evaluations regarding the quality of the ECEC system should be used as the basis for improvement. Information about the quality of the ECEC system should also be made available to the public. PH OTO CR ED IT: U NIC EF 3. Free and effective access to education Main challenges experienced by children in Lithuania in relation to education Although education is free and universal for all children in Lithuania, many barriers to access and other challenges still remain. First and foremost, great inequality exists between schools in terms of the quality of services, with the greatest disadvantage evident in schools in rural areas, certain areas of cities and in minority language schools. Such inequality exposes children living in rural areas and less well-off urban areas, as well as the children of non-Lithuanian ethnic groups, to low-quality education. Many of the schools attended by these children suffer a lack of laboratories, IT equipment, learning support specialists, up-to-date books and methodologies and highly qualified teachers, and a lack of transport to and from non-formal education activities as well as a lack of choice in such activities. The lack of learning support specialists and lack of choice in free-of-charge non-formal education activities, especially among children with SEN and disabilities, is major and prevent problem in all schools. Moreover, although education is considered free of charge for all children, hidden costs remain a great issue. Despite school tuition being free, the families of school students have to pay for certain school materials, activity books, transport, food and various extra courses and activities that contribute to their learning. This can be extremely problematic for low-income families, especially those living in remote areas, where hidden costs limit access to both formal and non-formal education. Immigrant children, returnee children and children of migrant origin are also insufficiently included in the educational system. There is a lack of teachers from different cultural backgrounds in schools, Lithuanian language is not sufficiently well taught to non-native-speaking children, and teachers lack the skills to work with children with different languages and cultures. A lack of learning support specialists is also a major problem in this context. 7 8Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania Table 2. Number of children in need of free and effective access to education Vulnerable group Estimated size of the group Data source and year Children in low-income families 24.8% (100, 000) of children between ages of 6 and 19 are at risk of poverty Eurostat, 2020 Roma children 1,036 (children of all ages) Overview of Roma situation in Lithuania, 2016 Migrant and returnee children Returnee-children: 412 Immigrant children: 3,303 Ministry of Education and Science, 2018OSP, 2020 Children from non-Lithuanian ethnic backgrounds 31,502 Education management information system, 2020-2021 Children living in rural areas 53,510 Education management information system, 2020-2021 Children with special needs and disabilities 4,873 Education management information system, 2020-2021 Policy responses to improve access to educationThe Lithuanian government recognizes the issue of low academic achievements among Lithuanian children and its link to the lack of quality of education in Lithuanian. The government recognizes issues such as inequalities between schools and the lack of inclusion of the most vulnerable children such as children with SEN and disabilities and children of migrant origin. To reduce these inequalities, it proposes to equip all schools equally with highly qualified teachers, learning support specialists, laboratories, IT equipment and the necessary methodologies. The National Education Development Programme 2021-2030 foresees that by 2030, 97% of children with SEN and 75% of children with disabilities will attend general education schools; 75% of all children will attend non-formal education; 50% of children with SEN will attend non-formal education; 65% of teachers will be employed in schools after graduation; and 40% of teachers will have MA degree. In addition, it is expected to improve pupils PISA results to reach 16th place among all participating countries by the year 2025. To achieve these goals, the government has allocated a budget of EUR 550 million. The Strategic Action Plan of the Ministry of Education, Science and Sport for the year 2021-2023 seeks to improve teachers qualifications; implement the monitoring and assessment of students, schools and education as a whole; develop infrastructure for inclusive education; and to integrate formal and non-formal education. Tools to achieve these goals include courses to improve teachers competencies; increases in teachers salaries; online self-assessment programmes for schools; monitoring indicators for education; purchasing additional school buses and laboratory equipment; modernizing school infrastructure; modernizing non-formal education facilities; increasing support to Lithuanian schools abroad; providing coordinated support to immigrated and returnee children and their families; expanding the number of all-day schools; and increasing funding for student benefits. Nevertheless, teaching remains among the lowest-paid professions, and teachers do not receive any of the financial and educational support necessary to motivate them when working with children with SEN and disabilities, or with children from minority backgrounds. The Political Programme of the XVIII Government of Lithuania also sets similar goals. In addition, it foresees the establishment of national education quality standards and improvements in the quality of education in minority schools. Although most of these goals are similar to those set in previously mentioned documents, the Political Programme of the XVIII Government of Lithuania foresees the use of different tools to achieve these goals. These include modernizing the curricula (including a multilingual reading and maths programme, as well as updated history programmes that recognize the importance of minorities in Lithuanian culture), reduced class 9Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania sizes, additional financing for learning support specialists, more up-to-date books in minority languages, and the digitalization of minority schools. According to data from interviews, the issue of schools lack of autonomy still remains, as they are not given the power to make their own decisions regarding financial allocations and various aspects of curricula, despite the schools themselves being best placed to know what is missing, and what is necessary for their children. Educational tools of the largest scale will include mobile school staff teams and millennial schools. Mobile school staff teams will consist of teams of teachers and other learning specialists that will go to schools facing issues and work there temporarily to improve the situation. Millennial schools will be located in different regions in Lithuania and will benefit from better teachers and STE(A)M laboratories, and modern curricula for formal and non-formal education. All children from the surrounding region will be able to use the facilities and courses provided at these schools. These schools are intended to reduce inequalities between regions, and to provide equal opportunities for all children irrespective of their living place, as well as to improve overall academic achievements. Nevertheless, some of the experts interviewed as part of this research expressed concern that these schools might even worsen equality among regions and children, as millennial schools would absorb all of the best resources in the area and become elite institutions. Children learning in other schools in the area would thereby receive an even lower quality education, as not all of them would have access to these elite schools. The inequalities between schools and regions with regard to quality therefore remains an issue. More detailed, focused tools and more integrated solutions are required to break the cycle of poverty by providing every child with the highest-quality education at all educational levels. Meanwhile, the Law Amending the Law on Education of the Republic of Lithuania and The Description of the Procedures for Organizing the Education for Pupils with SEN, seek to improve the inclusion of children with SEN, those with disabilities and those from other vulnerable backgrounds (migrants, at social risk, from low-income families etc.), as well as to reduce the number of school dropouts. The tools provided include continuously working with childrens parents, pupil self-care plans (provided for children who have various health issues), and individual learning plans. Other tools include the provision of special classes, transport, school meals, school supplies, and improved inter-institutional cooperation. Municipal administrations are encouraged to work more effectively to ensure the well-being of the child, to remove interdepartmental barriers between educational assistance, municipalities, state institutions and establishments, organizations and non-governmental actors, to ensure inter-institutional co-operation. Improved inter-institutional attention to vulnerable children and their parents should reduce social exclusion, dropouts from schools, as well as improve parents skills and involvement in their childrens education, in addition to improving childrens psycho-emotional well-being while attending educational institutions. Inter-institutional co-operation means that all of a childs needs must be identified and dealt with through cooperation between all of the necessary services and support providers. Nevertheless, the inclusion of children with SEN and disabilities, in general, remains a great challenge due to the aforementioned lack of competencies and motivation among teachers, as well as a lack of learning support specialists and the physical appropriateness of schools buildings. Other smaller-scale programmes also exist, such as quality baskets, all-day schools, day care centres and financial baskets for non-formal education. Quality baskets seek to improve pupils academic achievements. EUR 30,324,2001 were allocated to this programme across 270 schools. The programme includes the evaluation of schools, provision of improvement plans to the schools and the monitoring of their success. Meanwhile, financial baskets for non-formal education seek to improve childrens attendance in non-formal education by providing every child with a monthly allowance to purchase non-formal education activities. All-day schools are settings in which children are provided with educational activities after official school hours. The main goals of these schools are to improve the inclusion of children from vulnerable backgrounds and to reduce conflicts between parents family life and work commitments. Day care centres are social care settings in which children from the most vulnerable backgrounds (such as families at social risk) gather after school and receive help with their homework, participate in various educational and cultural activities, and receive free meals. These centres also seek to work with childrens parents to improve their parenting skills and to ensure that children receive all the support they need. Despite improved financial allocations and more attention being given to the parents, the hidden costs of education remain, and there is a lack of universal provision of school supplies and other necessary materials. 10Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania Recommendations for improving access to education There should be universal and inclusive education for all children: geographical and socio-economic disparities should be addressed, as well as differences in levels of inclusion and quality among schools. Universality and equality in the education system would reduce inequality between children from families of different socio-economic status. It would also improve academic achievement and decrease school dropouts. It is necessary to provide all children with school supplies, transport and meals to reduce hidden costs and bullying in schools. It is also important to address such differences as the unequal distribution of learning support specialists, laboratories, IT infrastructure and high-quality teaching staff among schools, and to reduce differences between elite and rural as well as minority schools. Reducing inequalities between schools would also improve the inclusion of children with SEN and children with migrant backgrounds. Targeted interventions should also take place to improve boys academic achievements. Update curricula and provide greater flexibility in the selection and design of programmes. It is crucial to enrich learning experiences while supporting the effective use of digital technologies and encouraging activities that link learning with real-life experience. It is also necessary to improve the curricula in vocational schools so that they effectively combine strong basic and job-related skills. Regions, cities and schools should be allowed to choose from a list of validated activities and programmes that best meet the needs of their children. Greater investment in measures that reduce early school leaving. Interdisciplinary communication is crucial to ensure that children who are not well included in schools are identified and worked with, to reduce the risk of dropouts. It is also necessary to improve communication with childrens parents, to ensure that they receive all the necessary information and that their individual needs and those of their children are met. Preventive and tailored interventions that involve multiple actors (such as families, schools, and so on) are identified as being more likely to succeed. Developing early warning systems for pupils at risk could help to ensure effective measures are taken before problems become manifest. The availability of various routes back into mainstream education and training is also important. Expand all-day schools and non-formal education opportunities across Lithuania. The lack of teachers and other staff, as well as additional transport costs, learning supplies, additional school meals and the necessity to adapt methodologies, are all concerns that must be addressed in order to ensure the expansion and quality of all-day schools and non-formal education across Lithuania. It is also important to address the issue of access to non-formal education for children living in rural areas, as well as for children with SEN and disabilities. Also important is the need to ensure that a variety of after school activities options are available for these children. Strengthen the teaching workforce. It is important to attract teachers with different backgrounds, genders and ages. All teachers should have a BA degree and at least some should have a Masters degree. Initial teacher education also needs to be improved, and greater flexibility should be provided in terms of the ways in which people can acquire a teaching degree. It is important to ensure that new teachers can work in a well-supported environment and receive frequent feedback and mentoring during the early years of their careers. In addition, all teachers should be provided with qualification courses, and teachers opportunities to network and exchange knowledge and experiences at school should be strengthened and improved. There should be a more coherent career pathway for teachers that rewards teaching excellence. The methods used to recruit teachers should be improved, and salaries should be raised. Set national quality standards and implement monitoring. It is important to prioritize education at policy level as part of the overall solution to social exclusion and poverty throughout the integration process. Any strategy should therefore provide clear timelines, targets, baselines and indicators to monitor progress, as well as adequate financial, material and human resources. External evaluation must be carried out, as well as the provision of methodology and tools for internal evaluation by schools. General quality criteria need to be set as high as possible, while minimum quality thresholds are also required to avoid a lack of balance between regions and avoid a situation in which the quality of a childs education depends on the region in which they are born. Funding on a larger scale should also ensure consistency between richer and poorer regions, to avoid a situation in which municipalities with a higher prevalence of low-income families lack the means to serve the needs of those families. The possibility should be considered of assigning higher weights in the funding formula to socio-economically disadvantaged students. More attention should be devoted to improving efficiency in the allocation and use of school maintenance budgets. PH OTO CR ED IT: U NIC EF - VA KH TAN G K HET AG UR I 4. Free and effective access to healthcare Main challenges experienced by children in Lithuania in relation to healthcare Socio-economic disadvantages negatively influence childrens access to the healthcare system in Lithuania. Childrens medical and dental needs may remain unmet due to various reasons, such as families inability to afford treatment, long waiting lists, long travel times, or no means of transport, as well as a lack of time due to parents work or their responsibility to care for other family members. Children in low-income or single-parent families, Roma families and children living in precarious family situations are at a high risk of not receiving necessary health treatments due to travel costs, lack of time to take children to the doctor, and also due to some necessary and continuous treatments not being entirely free of charge and, in the case of and Roma families families in precarious situations, due to a lack of education and interest in childrens health on the part of parents. One of the most obvious issues is the insufficient level of vaccinations. Vaccination rate among children in Lithuania are lower than the 95 per cent recommended by the WHO, and the issue of non-vaccination is particularly common among Roma children. Another important issue relating to healthcare is a lack of physical activity by children, often determined by the absence of interest by parents and financial reasons. The children who experience the highest risk of low physical activity are those from low-income families, families at social risk, single-parent families and Roma families, as the main reasons for low levels of physical activity include the inability to afford after-school sports activities and/or transportation, lack of time to take children to these activities or to supervise childrens activities on a daily basis, as well as the previously mentioned lack of parents education and interest in their childrens health in the cases of families at social risk and Roma families. These same groups of children do not always have access to mental health services when needed, due to long waiting lists and parents lack of time or transport to take children to consultations, especially when they live in remote rural areas, far away from clinics. The lack of availability of psychological counselling is especially problematic for children from low-income and single-parent families, as their parents often cannot afford private consultations and are even more time-poor than wealthier families. Families raising children with disabilities or special needs report having limited access to certain treatments their children need, as well as a lack of specialists, long waiting periods, and so on. Migrant and refugee children may experience limited access to free healthcare. 11 12Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania Table 3. Number of children in need of free and effective access to healthcare Vulnerable group Estimated size of the group Data source and year Children in low-income families 24% (138,000) of children between birth and the age of 19 are at risk of poverty Eurostat, 2021 Roma children 1,036 Overview of the Roma situation in Lithuania, 2016 Children living in precarious family situations 17,430 Official Statistics Portal, 2018 Migrant and returnee children 4,310 Ministry of Education and Science, 2018OSP, 2020 Children with disabilities 14,289 NGO Confederation for Children, 2017 Children with mental illness 701.05 per 10,000 children The Institute of Hygiene, 2018 Children in single-parent families 26% of all families150,000 children Eurostat, 2017Lithuanian Population and Housing Census, 2011 Policy responses to improve access to healthcareEnsuring childrens health and social well-being is an important part of the national health system in Lithuania. Access to, and the quality of, healthcare services, health literacy, mental and physical health and sex education are at the heart of the National Progress Programme 2021-2030, the Programme of the XVIII Government of the Republic of Lithuania, and the Public Healthcare Development Programme for 2016-2023. Physical activities and mental health services are not currently accessible for all children and their families in Lithuania; thus, the national focus is on spreading awareness of the importance of mental and physical health, increasing access to sporting activities, and improving childrens health monitoring. The National Progress Programme 2021-2030 strategically aims to increase social well-being inclusion within Lithuanias population, and strengthen its health. To achieve this goal, the following measures are planned: improved adaptation of the environment for people with disabilities, including children (e.g. transport, infrastructure, services, information); increased attention to childrens psychological state and access to mental health services; improved access to physical activities for children; high-quality health care services; improved health literacy; an efficient health system with focus on stronger primary care; and improved access to outpatient care. Moreover, issues such as long waiting lists to receive treatment, the high cost of drugs and high levels of corruption are also addressed. However, some healthcare programmes such as continuous rehabilitation services and treatments for certain developmental disorders, as well as transport services, remain among the biggest barriers to accessing healthcare provision for the most vulnerable children in Lithuania. The Programme of the XVIII Government of the Republic of Lithuania plans to improve access to sporting activities and mental health services. The main tools to achieve this include promoting more equal distribution of qualified sports specialists across the country; introducing up to three physical education lessons per week in all general education schools; updating the physical education curriculum; providing swimming lessons to all children in primary schools; improving sex education; and improving access to mental health services. The National Public Healthcare Development Programme for 2016-2023 also seeks to promote physical and mental health, as well as encouraging a healthy lifestyle and culture, by promoting health literacy and ensuring the sustainability of the public health care system. To achieve these goals, awareness will be raised with regard to physical and mental health, with an emphasis on the prevention of illnesses in schools; updating sports 13Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania equipment and facilities in schools; monitoring physical activity and childrens mental state; increasing the availability of high-quality public health care services and improving the management of the public health care system overall. The key mechanism currently used ensure childrens health needs are met is preventive annual health inspections and the National Immunization Programme 2019-2023. The latter provides that all recommended vaccinations included in the national immunization scheme are free of charge. The Programme aims to ensure at least 90 per cent of children are vaccinated (in the case of measles and rubella, not less than 95 per cent) across the country and in each municipality. Meanwhile, preventive annual health examinations at health care institutions include consultations with family doctors and dentists, and are compulsory for all children attending pre-primary and general education. However, a lack of attention is paid to the health of children who fall outside formal care and education systems. Attending to the medical needs of these children depends solely on their parents who, as previously mentioned, may lack interest or knowledge about their childrens health. A grey area also exists with regard to refugee children, who have different rights to the nationals in terms of access to healthcare. Meanwhile, children with disabilities receive financial assistance and various free services. These include a social assistance pension; targeted compensation for assistance costs for children with disabilities; and universal and free early rehabilitation for children with developmental disorders. The mechanism for integrated family services includes the provision of positive parenting training, psychological counselling, ECEC services, transport and more. Nevertheless, many issues still remain for children with SEN and disabilities, who face additional challenges in addressing everyday medical needs such as dental treatment. They also lack access to special, targeted treatments and integrated assistance that could help to meet all of their needs and reduce the burden on their families. Recommendations for improving access to healthcare Consistent coordination between central and local institutions is necessary in order to ensure

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