Audio By Carbonatix
Ghana has made progress in reducing under five deaths since 1990 but with an annual rate of reduction of 2.6% of under five deaths, Ghana will not achieve the MDG 4 target to reduce the number of children who die before the age of five according to the latest data on child mortality.
The most recent Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey conducted by the Ghana Statistical Service with support from partners in 2011 reports that every year, out of 1,000 children born alive, 82 will not live to celebrate their fifth birthday. What is more, the data show that out of these 82 deaths, 32 will not make it past the first 30 days of life. The number of newborns who are dying has not changed much in the last decade.
The trend in Ghana is similar to global trends which according to a new report released today “Committing to Child Survival: A Promise Renewed Progress Report 2013” indicates that “despite rapid progress in reducing child deaths since 1990, the world is failing to renew the promise for the most vulnerable citizens” its children.
The 2013 progress report which is the second in the series aims to track progress and promote accountability for global commitments made to children. The report indicates that unless immediate action is taken to address the situation, the world is not likely to meet the MDG 4 on child mortality until 2028.
In Ghana according to the MICS 2011 data twice as many children born to the country’s 20 per cent poorest population are more likely to die than the 20 per cent in the richest quintile. Geographically, the Northern region has the highest number (124) of children who die before age five followed by the Upper West (108) and then the Brong Ahafo regions (104). All these numbers are out of every one thousand children born alive.
Interestingly women who have had a secondary education are less likely to lose their children than their counterparts who are uneducated. In contrast, the educational level of a woman has no bearing on new born deaths; the same numbers of newborns die before the first 30 days of life irrespective of their mother’s educational level.
The key to preventing more newborns from dying in Ghana is an integrated strategy that links key interventions across the continuum of care from pre–pregnancy care to the post-partum period.
At least two thirds of these deaths could be reduced in Ghana by these interventions. Skilled delivery, early initiation of breastfeeding and exclusive breast feeding are simple interventions that feed into the strategy These interventions should be part and parcel of integrated health care service delivery at all levels of the health care system.
“On-going efforts to strengthen the health care system in Ghana are good but we need to also work on demand, and ensure more rural women use the facilities more often, and in so doing prevent loss of lives” said UNICEF Representative, Susan Namondo Ngongi. “We must make a concerted effort to commit to reverse the situation of newborns in Ghana, everyone must make the pledge vowing to support the progress on child survival. The babies about to be born can’t wait!”
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Family wealth should be viewed as asset class for building transgenerational enterprises – Alex Dadey
1 minute -
Ghana’s response to Ghanaian evacuees was not necessary- Julius Malema
5 minutes -
Childhood kidney care strained by shortage of specialists, limited equipment—Paediatric Nephrologist
7 minutes -
Over 3m Ghanaians live with mild mental health conditions—GloMeFÂ
21 minutes -
US justice department launches criminal investigation into Trump accuser E Jean Carroll, reports say
25 minutes -
BoG pushes stronger property checks to reduce fraud in real estate sector
28 minutes -
Six students hospitalised after clash between Offinso Technical Institute students and town youth
28 minutes -
No prior notice was given – Weija-Gbawe MCE raises concern over Dam spillage
30 minutes -
Africa’s problem is not ideas but inconsistent execution — Alex Apau Dadey
32 minutes -
Ghana’s building inflation holds steady at 2.2% in April 2026
37 minutes -
Former US Attorney General Pam Bondi diagnosed with cancer
39 minutes -
An unhealthy focus on sex – Married at First Sight UK insiders on show’s ‘toxic’ culture
39 minutes -
Ousted BP chairman hits back at ‘lies’ about his behaviour
39 minutes -
Young people out of work or training costing UK ÂŁ125bn as report warns of ‘perfect storm’
39 minutes -
Cannabis worth an estimated €4.2m seized
39 minutes