According to a report released May 6 by the U.S.-based
humanitarian group Save the Children more than 200 million children under age
5 do not get basic health care when they need it, and many lives could be
spared by training local community health workers in remote and underserved
areas.
The report, called “State of the World’s Mothers,” ranked
146 countries for how good they are for mothers and children. It found that
nearly 10 million deaths occur each year from treatable ailments such as diarrhea
and pneumonia, the majority of them registering in the developing countries.
The countries topping the list included
Also, among 55 developing countries included in the survey,
“There is a great divide between the status of mothers'
health and well-being in rich and poor countries. In rich nations, where women
have access to basic health care, giving birth is usually a time of joy. But in
poor countries, where there is little or no access to skilled health workers,
it is typically tragic. Every woman in the 10 worst countries is likely to
suffer the unbearable loss of a child in her lifetime,” Charles MacCormack,
president and CEO of Save the Children said, according to the group’s Web site.
The rankings were based on data that included immunization against
childhood diseases like malaria and tetanus, access to treatment for leading
childhood killers such as diarrhea and pneumonia, prenatal care and other
factors.
"The
The report found that in the
These data contrasted those existing in
The report said in terms of sheer numbers,
The report concluded that use of existing, low-cost tools and knowledge
could save more than 6 million of the 9.7 million children who die annually
from easily preventable or curable causes.