India and China, where 2.5
million child deaths were recorded in 2006, need to make 'significant
strides' in health-related services for children if the UN's millenium
development goals are to be met, a UNICEF report warned Tuesday.
UNICEF said that unless India, in particular, achieved 'major
improvements in health, nutrition, water and sanitation, education,
gender equality and child protection, global efforts to reach the
millenium development goals will fail.'
The United Nations in 2000 set a global target of reducing deaths of children under 5 by two-thirds by 2015.
Reducing child mortality in India and China, the world's two most populous countries, poses the biggest challenge.
In 2006, India and China accounted for nearly a third of all child deaths worldwide, UNICEF said.
In India alone, child deaths were 2.1 million while in China, they were 415,000.
While noting that health services had improved impressively with the
rapid economic growth in both India and China, more needs to be done in
both countries and the entire Asia-Pacific region, UNICEF said in its
State of Asia-Pacific's Children 2008 report.
The report
pointed out that public health expenditures in the region averaged 1.9
per cent gross of its domestic product (GDP), well below the world
average on 5.1 per cent. In South Asia, health spending was 1.1 per
cent of GDP.
The UNICEF report noted that as more of the
region's health services are privatized, governments' health budgets
have fallen, resulting in declining public facilities for the poor.
'The divide between rich and poor is rising at a troubling rate within
subregions of Asia-Pacific, leaving vast numbers of mothers and
children at risk of increasing relative poverty and continued exclusion
from quality primary health-care services,' the report said.
In China, most child deaths occur within the first week of life,
largely because of a lack of obstetric services. In India, one out of
every three women is underweight, putting them at risk of having babies
with low birth weights and these babies are 20 times more likely to die
in infancy than healthy babies.
South Asia is the only subregion in the world where female life expectancy is lower than male life expectancy.
'Unless discrimination against women and girls is addressed as part of
overall strategies to improve child and maternal health, high rates of
maternal and child mortality will remain stubbornly entrenched,' the
report concluded.
Without improved health care, 13
Asia-Pacific countries would struggle to reduce their child mortality
rates by two-thirds by 2015, UNICEF warned.
Other UN
millenium development goals include eradicating extreme hunger and
poverty, achieving universal primary education, promoting gender
equality, combating disease and ensuring environmental sustainability.