The infant and under-five mortality is decreasing at a faster pace than neonatal mortality in almost all countries, including middle
and low income countries like Turkey so neonatal mortality emerges as an important component of overall under-five mortality and
should receive additional attention. As known, the first 28 days of life – the neonatal period – is the most vulnerable time for a child’s
survival. Neonatal mortality rate is the ratio of the number of deaths in the first 28 days of life to the number of live births occurring
in the same population during the same period of time. The global neonatal mortality of 28/1,000 live births is unacceptably high.
The results show that every year over 4 million babies die in the first four weeks of life; 3 million of these deaths occur in the early
neonatal period. Moreover, it is estimated that more than 3.3 million babies are stillborn every year; one in three of these deaths
occurs during delivery and could largely be prevented. Ninety-eight per cent of the deaths take place in the developing world. As
seen from the figures, the huge difference in mortality between high- and low-income countries and regions is presently one of the
most burning human rights issues. The risk of death in the neonatal period is six times greater than in developed countries; in the
least developed countries it is over eight times higher. The major causes of neonatal death are birth asphyxia, neonatal infection,
low birth weight/prematurity, birth trauma and congenital malformations. In this presentation I will discuss the achievements in the
area of neonatal and maternal health with the trends in neonatal and perinatal mortality rates in the world and Turkey last 20 years,
the major causes and lessons learned from the successful countries, which reduced their neonatal mortality rates significantly last
20 years. During my discussions, I will focus on ten simple recommendations that are given to reduce neonatal mortality. As we all
know very well, it is possible to reduce newborn mortality in all countries and regions. Most important to achieve these goals is,
however, political will.
Author(s): Seval Akgun
Abstract |
PDF
Share this