2. Fact progress
• Globally, the number of deaths of children under five years of age fell from 12
million in 1990 to 6.9 million in 2011.
• In developing countries, the percentage of underweight children under five years
old dropped from 28% in 1990 to 17% in 2011.
• While the proportion of births attended by a skilled health worker has increased
globally, fewer than 50% of births are attended in the WHO African Region.
• Globally, new HIV infections declined by 24% between 2001 and 2011.
• Existing cases of tuberculosis are declining, along with deaths among HIVnegative tuberculosis cases.
• The world has met the United Nations Millennium Development Goals target on
access to safe drinking-water but more needs to be done to achieve the
sanitation target.
3. Target 4
Target four was to reduce child mortality rate by two thirds between 1990 and 2015.
•
Globally, a huge amount of progress has been made in reducing child mortality under
five years of age.
• In 2011 only 6.9 million children under five died but in 1990 12 million died. Between
1990 and 2011, under-five mortality declined by 41%, from 87 to 51 per 1000.
The rate of decline has accelerated in recent years – from 1.8% per year during 1990–
2000 to 3.2% during 2000–2011. even though this improvement, the world is unlikely to
achieve the MDG target of a two-thirds reduction in 1990 mortality levels by the year
2015.
In 2011, measles immunization coverage was 84% among children aged 12–23 months.
More countries are now achieving high levels of immunization in 2011, 64% of Member
States reached at least 90% coverage. Between 2000 and 2010, measles deaths decreased
by 74%, this meannt one fifth of the overall decline in child mortality.
5. Delays on reducing child mortality
the goal won't be reached until 2028, and delay could see as many as 35 million
more children dying.
The people in cities have mostly been helped and its time to now spread out
around different countries for this goal to finally be reached.
Over one third of all child deaths are linked to malnutrition, this can easily be
prevented with the right food supplies.
Most of these children are dying in developing countries from preventable causes in
which there are known and cost-effective ways to help. Unless efforts are increased
there will be little hope of decreasing 5.4 million child deaths per year
More than one billion children are severely deprived of at least one of the essential
goods and services they require to survive