United States is one of eight nations in the world where decreases in child and adolescent death over 27 years haven't been matched by reductions in maternal death, finds a new study.
United States is one of eight countries in the world where reductions in maternal death haven't also matched decreases in child and adolescent death over 27 years, reveals a new study. The findings of the study are published in the journal JAMA Pediatrics. This divergent trend also was found in American Samoa, Canada, Greece, Guam, Jamaica, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and Zimbabwe. Of these countries, the United States had the largest increase in the maternal mortality rate at 67.5 percent.
‘Child and adolescent deaths have decreased by 51.7 percent worldwide from 1990 to 2017. But the inequality between poor and rich countries has grown, with wealthier nations accounting for an increasingly smaller proportion of deaths overall.’
"Our findings are particularly alarming because the health of children is very closely linked to that of their mothers," said Dr. Nicholas Kassebaum, a senior author on the study and adjunct associate professor at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University of Washington School of Medicine. "This paradox warrants closer investigation in the United States to determine how we can prioritize health improvements for mothers alongside those for children and adolescents."
Kassebaum emphasized the study also identifies uneven progress in child and adolescent health over the 27-year study period, with inequity increasing between countries with the highest and lowest Socio-demographic Index (SDI) scores. SDI, a measure of development, takes into account per capita income, adult education, and total fertility rate for women under 25 years old.
For example, findings show the gap between the best and worst performers has widened. Low-SDI and low-middle-SDI countries experienced 82.2 percent of all child and adolescent deaths, up from 70.9 percent in 1990.
The study covers 1990 to 2017 and 195 countries and territories. A part of the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study, this new analysis is a comprehensive effort to quantify child and adolescent health internationally. Findings are presented for the collective age group of birth to 19 years, but also separately for neonates, infants, children, and adolescents. Study authors defined neonates as those younger than 28 days, infants as those younger than one year, children as those younger than ten years, and adolescents as those aged 10 to 19 years.
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Despite this considerable progress, lower respiratory infections, diarrhea, and acute malnutrition remained among the top killers of children and adolescents globally in 2017. Furthermore, HIV/AIDS remains an imminent threat to the health and well-being of older children and adolescents in many countries in sub-Saharan Africa, including South Africa, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Swaziland, Botswana, and Zambia.
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"An emerging threat is the large and growing burden of mental health and substance use disorders among older children and adolescents globally," said Dr. Bobby Reiner, lead author on the study and assistant professor at IHME.
"As more children survive infancy, already overburdened health systems will need to adapt to the challenge of addressing non-communicable diseases among older children and adolescents."
Reiner also noted that few countries showed any evidence of health improvements among adolescents over the 27 years beyond what was expected with general gains in societal development.
Additional findings include:
- More than half of the 6.64 million deaths in 2017 occurred in infants younger than one year, and of those, 47 percent occurred in the first week of life.
- There were a total of 50 countries where the probability of death by self-harm and interpersonal violence increased between 1990 and 2017.
- Every country in sub-Saharan Africa had either neonatal disorders, malaria, or HIV/AIDS as the leading cause of disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), with either diarrhea or lower respiratory infections often ranked second.
- In 2017, the top 10 causes of years lived with disability (YLDs) globally were iron-deficiency anemia, vitamin A deficiency, headache, conduct disorder, neonatal disorders, anxiety disorder, skin diseases, lower back pain, congenital disorders, and depression.
- Rates of YLDs decreased only slightly between 1990 and 2017, and increased with age.
The study is entitled "Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors in Child and Adolescent Health, 1990 to 2017."
DEATHS, BOTH SEXES, 2017
Under 20 years
- India: 1,299,265 deaths
- Nigeria: 866,170
- Pakistan: 421,784
- Democratic Republic of the Congo: 286,991
- China: 243,609
- Ethiopia: 232,389
- Indonesia: 147,791
- Bangladesh: 143,528
- Tanzania: 138,382
- Mali: 113,600
DEATHS, BOTH SEXES, 1990
Under 20 years
- India: 3,399,581 deaths
- China: 1,629,696
- Nigeria: 877,069
- Bangladesh: 654,730
- Pakistan: 601,805
- Ethiopia: 471,391
- Indonesia: 470,377
- Democratic Republic of the Congo: 299,385
- Brazil: 267,476
- Tanzania: 188,343
PERCENTAGE CHANGE IN DEATHS, BOTH SEXES, 1990-2017
Under 20 years - largest decrease
- Serbia: -86.9 percent (4,839 to 636 deaths)
- Armenia: -86.6 percent (3,836 to 514)
- Estonia: -86.5 percent (611 to 82)
- China: -85.0 percent (1,629,696 to 243,609)
- Maldives: -84.8 percent (488 to 74)
- Latvia: -84.5 percent (1,066 to 165)
- Albania: -84.0 percent (4,070 to 651)
- Portugal: -83.5 percent (3,013 to 499)
- South Korea: -82.7 percent (14,748 to 2,545)
- Romania: -82.3 percent (13,607 to 2,411)
Under 20 years - the largest increase
- Papua New Guinea: 40.5 percent (12,624 to 17,736)
- Vanuatu: 36.1 percent (238 to 324)
- Chad: 31.0 percent (67,124 to 87,908)
- Central African Republic: 24.3 percent (21,360 to 26,545)
- Zimbabwe: 12.5 percent (28,549 to 32,117)
- Iraq: 10.8 percent (40,510 to 44,894)
- South Sudan: 9.2 percent (48,460 to 52,897)
- Qatar: 4.9 percent (287 to 301)
- Afghanistan: 4.2 percent (96,809 to 100,823)
- United Arab Emirates: 2.8 percent (1,431 to 1,471)
Source-Eurekalert