Title: The Millennium Development Goals Linkages with Child Health
1The Millennium Development Goals Linkages with
Child Health
The Challenge in India
- Dr. KANUPRIYA CHATURVEDI
- Dr .S.K CHATURVEDI
2 Millennium Development Goals
- In the United Nations Millennium Summit in 2000,
147 countries adopted MDGs - Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger by half
relative to 1990 - Achieve universal primary education
- Promote gender equality and empower women
- Ensure environmental sustainability
- Reduce child mortality by two thirds relative to
1990 - Improve maternal health, including reducing
maternal mortality by three quarters relative to
1990 - Prevent the spread of HIV/ AIDS, malaria and
other diseases - Develop a global partnership for development
3The Global Challenge
- Nearly half the MDGs relate to health nutrition
- The targets cover a large share of the burden of
disease deaths among poor people - Child mortality 10.4 million/y
- Maternal deaths 0.5 million/y
- AIDS 2.9 million/y
- TB 1.6 million/y
- Malaria 1.1 million/y
- Illness, death, malnutrition impede economic
growth contribute to income poverty
4Goal 4 reduce child mortality
- Goal 4 reduce child mortality
- Reduce by two thirds, between 1990 and 2015, the
under-five mortality rate. - Close to 11 million children die every year
before reaching the age of five, or 20 per
minute,30,000 per day. Nearly 4 million of these
die in the first 28 days of life. - Most of the deaths are due to a handful of causes
(pneumonia, diarrhoea, measles, malaria, and
neonatal causes). - Malnutrition is associated with 54 of the
deaths. - 99 of the deaths are in low and middle-income
countries, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa and South
Asia. - Measles deaths world-wide dropped by nearly 40
between 1999 and 2003, with the largest reduction
in Africa.
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6Countries with most under-5 deaths, 2000
7Goal 5 Improve maternal health
- Every year, at least 529,000 women die in
pregnancy or childbirth. 99 of these occur in
the developing world. - For every woman who dies in childbirth, around 20
more suffer injury, infection or disease -
touching approximately 10 million women each
year. - Complications resulting from unsafe abortions
account for 13 of all maternal deaths.
8Avoidable maternal deaths each year
9Goal 6 Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other
diseases
- Every day, 8000 people die of AIDS-related
conditions or some 3 million deaths per year.
Only 400 000 of the five to six million people in
the advanced stage of the disease had access to
the anti-retroviral therapy in developing
countries at the end of 2003. - There are 8.8 million new cases of tuberculosis
(TB) a year. There are 5500 deaths a day, or
million deaths worldwide each year from TB. Some
80 of this morbidity and mortality from TB falls
on 22 high-burden countries. - There are almost 300 million cases of acute cases
of malaria each year. More than a million cases
of malaria are fatal each year. Some 90 of the
burden falls on tropical Africa, where malaria is
a major cause of mortality and morbidity in
children under five years of age.
10Challenges in India
11MDG4- Reduce child mortality
- Infant and Young Child mortality remains
unacceptably high. - About 2.4 million deaths occur annually in
under-5 year-old children in India. Seven out of
every 10 of these are due to diarrhea, pneumonia,
measles, or malnutrition and often a combination
of these conditions. - In India abut 30 of children born with LBW.
12Goal 4. Reduce child mortality Infant Mortality
Rate
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16MDG5- Improve maternal health
- 130000 deaths an year
- Equivalent to maternal Deaths in a year in India
- Every day in the year
- Every six minute in India
- For every Maternal Death 20 mothers start
leading a life in the morbid conditions. - Every here 1- 1.25 lakh children get MDS
(Maternal Deprivation Syndrome)
17Direct causes of Maternal Deaths
- Haemorrhage (Antepartum Postpartum).
- Pregnancy Induced Hypertension Eclampsia.
- Sepsis Septicaemia.
- Obstructed Labour Ruptured Uterus.
- Septic Abortion.
- Other Causes.
18MDG6- Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases
- Halt and begin to reverse the spread of HIV/ AIDS
- Sentinel surveillance optimal way of measuring
infection among high and low risk groups - Number of sentinel sites and their location an
indicator of adequacy of coverage
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20People living with HIV
21Combat malaria and other diseases
- Target Halt by 2015 and begin reversal of
incidence of malaria and other major diseases
22Why a special effort now?
- New political and financial commitments
- Renewed focus on building sustainable health
systems and financing - Successful implementation builds confidence that
scaling up of known interventions can accelerate
progress on MDGs - Processes and mechanisms emerging to improve
donor harmonization and aid effectiveness
23But rapid gains are possible through
- Practical approaches to achieve the MDGs- key
interventions and policies - Changes in national policies strategic
directions, capacity building, and financial
support - Stronger health systems
- Complementary actions across sectors (education,
water, energy, transport) - Donor mobilization and harmonization
- We can learn from success stories
24Evidence based interventionsEstimated U5 Deaths
Prevented With Universal Coverage
- Preventive interventions Proportion of all
deaths () - Breastfeeding 13
- Insecticide treated materials
7 - Complementary feeding 6
- Zinc 5
- Clean delivery 4
- Water, sanitation, hygiene 3
- Newborn temperature management
2 - Tetanus toxoid 2
- Vitamin A 2
- Measles vaccine 1
25Evidence based interventionsEstimated U5 Deaths
Prevented With Universal Coverage
- Treatment interventions Proportion of all
deaths () - Oral rehydration therapy 15
- Antibiotics for sepsis 6
- Antibiotics for pneumonia 6
- Antimalarials 5
- Zinc 4
- Newborn resuscitation 4
- Antibiotics for dysentery 3
- Vitamin A lt1
26Policies
- For scaling up education with investments in
schools, teachers and supplies - For scaling up of health with investments in
health staff, doctors, health facilities, medical
and paramedical training for maternal care,
IMNCI, supplies of drugs/ equipment - More decentralized planning and community
involvement and public private partnership - Gender equality and rights for women
- To pursue huge quick wins for health goals
27Examples of rapid gains in Health sector
- Training of large number of village workers to
ensure basic expertise, services and counseling - Distribution of free ORS, Disposable delivery
kits (DDK), contraceptives, Iron- folic acid
Vitamin A, anti-malarial insecticide
impregnated bed nets in Malaria endemic areas - Elimination of user fees for basic health
services financed by increased domestic and Donor
resources.
28What does this mean for India
- Develop credible strategies and plans to reach
MDGs as part of PRSP and public expenditure
program - Improve governance and policy environment
- Commit domestic resources
- Improve monitoring and evaluation of results
29Examples of rapid gains in Health sector
- Expanding access to RCH services by focusing on
out reach services, making health facilities
functional and ensuring supplies and logistics - IEC and Program communication to increase access
to information, motivating for family/community
actions and use of services - Expansion of use of proven effective drug
combinations for AIDS, TB, Malaria, Diarrhea and
ARI( pneumonia and Asthama)
30Approach Service delivery mode based planning of
interventions
- Scaling interventions with high efficacy- family
and community based interventions - Making universally accessible- the outreach
services - Institution based and individual child centered
services like malnutrition management facilities
31Data sources
- IMR and Child mortality
- Sample registration system (SRS) at national and
state level- fairly accurate - National Family Health Survey) NFHS- fairly
accurate - RCH district rapid household surveys low
precision - Causes of mortality--RGI
- Fairly elaborate and reliable
- Delay in sharing collated information
- Recent Involvement of Medical Colleges--Quality
- Disaggregated data for urban and rural India
32Data sources
- MMR
- Direct methods- large sample size required
- Indirect methods
- Snow ball technique
- House- to house survey- better
- Sisterhood method
- Estimating from sex differentials in mortality at
reproductive ages involving regression techniques
33Data sources
- HIV/ AIDS/ Malaria/ TB
- Reports from program implementers
- Under reporting of incidence/ prevalence/ deaths
- Over reporting of cure rates to meet the targets
34Reasons for the shortfall
- Availability-
- Adequacy of supply- satisfactory
- Periodicity a bottleneck
- Quality of equipment/ drugs- need improvement
- Accessibility-
- Difficult to reach areas- neglected
- Gender and socioeconomic discrimination
- Round the clock services questionable
- Accessibility of govt services in urban areas
35Reasons for the shortfall
- Utilization
- Lack of awareness about services
- Irregularity of services
- Quality not always maintained
- Adequate coverage
- Drop outs- a common factor
- Effective coverage
- Skills of workers always not up to the desired
level
36Costs and benefits
- Existing system takes into account supplies,
staff and minimal on infrastructures - Five country assessments and estimates indicate
that annual public investments or MDGs will be
80US per person in 2005-6 scaling up to 124 US
in 2015
37Creation of national / state / district level
processes for scaling up
- Child Survival Partnership Recommendations
- Ensure effective convergence of all departments,
public and private sector developing
partners,.. - Prioritize the household and community-level
interventions - Face real challenge of reaching high levels of
effective coverage with evidence-based
interventions among under-privileged community - Address operational bottlenecks management
issues - Work efficiently with community-level private
providers. - Public Private partnership efforts, involvement
of NGOs - Other Initiatives
- Public Private Partnershipin Immunization,
Integrated Management of Childhood illnesses
(IMNCI)