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World Prematurity Day 2013 Dr. Elizabeth Mason, Director Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health World Health Organization on behalf of the Steering.

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Presentation on theme: "World Prematurity Day 2013 Dr. Elizabeth Mason, Director Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health World Health Organization on behalf of the Steering."— Presentation transcript:

1 World Prematurity Day 2013 Dr. Elizabeth Mason, Director Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health World Health Organization on behalf of the Steering Committee Version Nov 2013

2 Born too Soon: Global Action Report on Preterm birth
World Health Organization 21 April, 2017 Born too Soon: Global Action Report on Preterm birth First estimates of preterm birth by country. Key points: 15 million babies are born preterm annually; > 1 in 10 live births. Preterm birth leading cause of newborn deaths > 1 million babies die annually due to preterm complications. 75% could be saved with current, cost-effective interventions — even without intensive care. Boys are more likely to be born preterm than girls but more likely to survive their first month

3 2000-2011: improved understanding of newborn mortality and importance of preterm birth
Perinatal causes 22% 2011 GLOBAL OVERVIEW 3 million 43% Malnutrition contributes to 60% of newborn deaths

4 Who is a preterm birth baby?
Late and moderate preterm 32 to <37 weeks 84% Baby born alive before 37 completed weeks of pregnancy Very preterm 28 to <32 weeks 10% Extremely preterm < 28 weeks 5%

5 What is the burden of preterm birth?
15 million preterm births/year > 50% neonatal deaths occur among preterms Direct cause of 35% of all neonatal deaths Significant disability risk: Visual impairment Hearing loss Chronic lung disease Developmental delay NCDs

6 135 million newborns and 15 million premature babies - health system needs and human capital outcomes

7 Every Newborn: Outline
1 Why are 3 million newborns dying? Can we change? Where do we want to be in 2035? [Target setting and other analyses discussion] How can we change outcomes for Every Newborn in every country? [Strategic objectives] What is the Every Newborn Action Plan? What is the process for building a Movement and a Plan? Who needs to be involved? [Discussion] 2 3 4 5

8 No newborn is born to die
Our delivery goal No newborn is born to die No baby stillborn No child stunted or dying ~ 280,000 die 3 million die 2.6 million die 2.9 million die 10 million deaths 3.5 million within a few days of birth

9 We know the causes of newborn deaths
3 main killers to address: Preterm birth (born too soon) Birth complications Neonatal infections 3 million 43% Newborn deaths invisible in global estimates until 2005 – now visible Source :CHERG and WHO, Liu et al Global, regional and national causes of child mortality in :.The Lancet. DOI: /SO In % of under five deaths were neonatal. In 2011 it as 43% 9

10 We can reduce the main causes of death
Newborn Survival Solutions – 3 by 2 Preterm birth Preterm labor management including antenatal corticosteroids* Care including Kangaroo mother care, essential newborn care Birth complications (and intrapartum stillbirths) Prevention with obstetric care * Essential newborn care, resuscitation* Neonatal infections Prevention, essential newborn care, breastfeeding, Chlorhexidine* Case management of neonatal sepsis * 1 2 3 * Prioritised by the UN Commission on Life Saving Commodities for Women and Children Over two-thirds of newborn deaths preventable – actionable now without intensive care

11 We have proof of change at scale
Some Li countries are “bending the curve” for newborn survival Over the last decade 77 countries reduced NMR by >25% including at least 13 low income countries Bangladesh, Bolivia, Eritrea, Guatemala, Indonesia, Nepal, Madagascar, Malawi, Morocco, Senegal, Rwanda, Tanzania, Vietnam MDG 4 MDG 5 Neonatal mortality rate Av annual change Rwanda Progressing 6.2% Bangladesh 4.0% Nepal 3.6% Malawi 3.5% Source: Newborn survival decade of change analysis: Health Policy and Planning. 27(Suppl. 3) papers 3 to 7

12 Outline Why are 3 million newborns dying? Can we change?
1 Why are 3 million newborns dying? Can we change? Where do we want to be in 2035? [Target setting and other analyses discussion] How can we change outcomes for Every Newborn in every country? [Strategic objectives] What is the Every Newborn Action Plan? What is the process for building a Movement and a Plan? Who needs to be involved? [Discussion] 2 3 4 5

13 Child survival target by 2035 in A Promise Renewed Under 5 mortality = 20/1000
A PROMISE RENEWED TARGET Global av U5MR of 15/1000 with every country below 20/1000 Global av NMR 7/1000 with every country below 10/1000 9.6 m deaths in 2000 6.9 m child deaths in 2011 3m are neonatal (43%) U5M current trajectory: AAR 2.5% Mortality rate (per 1,000 live births) MDG 4 NMR current trajectory: AAR 2.2% Unless we achieve major acceleration for newborn survival, we cannot reach our goal for ending preventable child deaths by 2035 Source: UNICEF State of the World’s Children 2012; The UN Inter-agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation, Levels and Trends in Child Mortality: Report 2011, 2011; Team analysis from 2035 onward based on straight-line ARR reduction from UNICEF numbers

14 Outline Why are 3 million newborns dying? Can we change?
1 Why are 3 million newborns dying? Can we change? Where do we want to be in 2035? [Target setting and other analyses discussion] How can we change outcomes for Every Newborn in every country? [Strategic objectives] What is the Every Newborn Action Plan? What is the process for building a Movement and a Plan? Who needs to be involved? [Discussion] 2 3 4 5

15 Strategic objectives Invest in care during labour, childbirth and the first days of life. Improve the quality of maternal and newborn care. This requires investment, especially for effective care at birth. Skilled workers are the key to change Reach every woman and every newborn and reduce inequalities achieve universal coverage and equity. Harness the power of parents, families and communities to mobilise change. Count every newborn - measurement, oversight and accountability improve and use the data. The Core Group of stakeholders who decided and started the process of developing the Every Newborn action plan identified a set of themes or key messages that the Every Newborn action plan may recommend; these, as everything else, will be discussed with countries and other stakeholders. Focus on care during labour, birth and the first days of life One-third of stillbirths and 75% of newborn deaths occur within this period. Many complications can be prevented by ensuring high quality, essential care for every pregnant woman and every newborn around the time of childbirth and in the first hours and days of life. Prioritize high impact, cost-effective interventions for mother and baby together, to tackle the main causes of mortality Complications from prematurity, intrapartum-related deaths including birth asphyxia, and neonatal infections are the leading causes of newborn mortality. Using the platform of essential care for every pregnant women and baby, the main causes of newborn deaths can be prevented and managed with affordable interventions at scale. Quality of care is essential Competent health care providers, particularly skilled birth attendants, are an essential requirement for providing care for both the woman and her baby. However, even where rates of skilled attendance at births are improving, the quality of care often remains poor as women and newborns do not receive all essential interventions that they may need. Investments to ensure that staff and services are trained, equipped and supported to meet required standards of care are essential. Achieve universal coverage and equity Access to quality care around childbirth is marked by great inequities, affecting vulnerable and deprived populations, in both urban and rural settings. Closing this equity gap within countries alone can save many maternal and newborn lives. The evidence of approaches to move towards universal coverage of the effective interventions is rapidly increasing, including health financing, use of information technology, and other innovations to address bottlenecks and reduce inequities. Count every newborn - measurement, oversight and accountability Measurement empowers managers to identify and address performance problems, make adjustments along the course, and account for commitments. Standardized indicators and targets can improve accountability and contribute to quality improvement. Harness the power of parents, families and communities Education and information are key to empowering parents, families and their communities to demand quality care. Evidence has shown the power of engaged community leaders, women’s groups, and community workers in turning the tide for better newborn outcomes. Integrate newborn action into existing RMNCH initiatives and efforts Building on and strengthening existing plans and processes will be critical to action in countries; thus ensuring integration of newborn action within existing RMNCH initiatives and efforts. Action by all - leadership, political will and financing Many different constituents can make a difference in ensuring that every pregnancy is wanted and healthy, every pregnant woman survives, and every newborn makes a healthy start in life to become a thriving child who can fulfil his/her full development potential. Advocacy has a key role to play in mobilising political will and leadership.

16 Care at birth, analysis from The Lancet Stillbirth series
Childbirth care Basic antenatal Advanced antenatal Deaths prevented: Stillbirths 1.1 million (45%) Newborn deaths 1.4 million (43%) Maternal deaths 201,000 (54%) TRIPLE RETURN ON INVESTMENT Source: Pattinson R, Kerber K, Buchmann E, et al, for The Lancet’s Stillbirths Series steering committee. Stillbirths: how can health systems deliver for mothers and babies? Lancet 2011; published online April 14. DOI: /S (10)

17 Quality of care is essential
World Health Organization 21 April, 2017 Quality of care is essential The quality gap is a contributor to slow progress towards MDG 4 and 5 and leads to significant morbidity as well as mortality. Increased coverage of facility care at birth is an opportunity to ensure that all women and babies receive effective, safe respectful care Programmatic change is possible and will also require better data to drive change.

18 Outline Why are 3 million newborns dying? Can we change?
1 Why are 3 million newborns dying? Can we change? Where do we want to be in 2035? [Target setting and other analyses discussion] How can we change outcomes for Every Newborn in every country? [Strategic objectives] What is the Every Newborn Action Plan? What is the process for building a Movement and a Plan? Who needs to be involved? [Discussion] 2 3 4 5

19 Why Every Newborn? Country demand for guidance and action, country driven Large problem but huge potential for rapid change since we know what to do and can develop clear context specific guidance on HOW Harmonize global response which so far has been slow and needs to link to many existing initiatives for reproductive, maternal, child and adolescent health care, scaling up global attention and action First, why do we need this sort of concise roadmap for change? There are three main reasons: First, countries are asking for guidance on scaling up key interventions and strategies to reduce these deaths and to prevent stillbirths. Second, we have the evidence on what works. Last year, PMNCH issued its consensus on essential interventions for RMNCH – those commodities and services proven to save lives of women and children. This year, we have heard from the UN Commission on Life-Saving Commodities for Women and Children, which highlight the importance of greater advocacy and action on corticosteroids, chlorohexidrine, injectible antibiotics and recussitation equipment to prevent newborn deaths. We need to work together, across all constituencies, to deliver these solutions at scale and drive greater public demand for essential newborn care. Third, we need to drive global action and greater harmonization between maternal and child health initiatives and strategies. Newborns, bringing together maternal and child health concerns, can help unite our work and root it more firmly in the continuum of care.

20 How it fits together in countries for sharpened RMNCH plans
Health Sector Strategic & Investment Plan Sharpened and Integrated National RMNCH Plan Increased access and use of FP Ending preventable maternal deaths Ending preventable newborn deaths Ending preventable child deaths for A Promise Renewed COMMODITIES, HUMAN RESOURCES etc.

21 Building a movement Building on Born Too Soon, A Promise Renewed for Child Survival Outreach: Senior policymakers, parliamentarians, civil society, media Reaching across communities: reproductive, maternal + newborn and child Advocacy and communications through all partners: National, regional, global – 500+ PMNCH partners The ENAP also implies building a movement for newborn health : - Building on existing movements such as EWEC, Born too soon and A Promise Renewed. The movement will target and aim at involving senior policy makers in countries, parliamentarians, civil society, media and the global health community, so that advocacy and communications is done through all partners at national, regional and global level. PMNCH who is one of the partners involved will have a special role to play in advocacy and partners involvement as it has more than 500 partners around the world.

22 Every Newborn consultations – Countries
Countries events: 17 country consultations between July – September 2013 Other countries have undergone high level meetings e.g. Ghana, South Africa, Zambia Regional consultations: West Africa (UNICEF Dakar office) 9th-12th July Asia (Kathmandu UNICEF office) 30th August – 1st September Upcoming consultations Cameroon, Niger Regional consultation in East and Southern Africa Country consultations India Nigeria Pakistan China DRC Bangladesh Afghanistan Uganda Kenya Senegal Malawi Nepal Thailand Sierra Leone Myanmar Philippines Vietnam Learn more about these events at EveryNewborn.org

23 Send your inputs! Join the action!
The way forward May – September 2013 Global and regional events National and regional consultations October 2013 – May 2014 Present to the WHO Executive Board Finalize Every Newborn including production and translations May 2014 Launch linked to 67th World Health Assembly Lancet series (update from 2005 and giving the analyses which are the basis for the Every Newborn) Online: What are the next steps ? We plan several consultations; some will take place at major global and regional conferences and meetings including the this Global Newborn Conference, Women Deliver, the World Health Assembly in May 2013, Pacific Health Summit, International Congress of Pediatricians, International Neonatal Nursing Conference, UN General Assembly, High-Level Meeting on the Post-MDG Framework * National consultations will be organized in 20 countries during July-September, accompanied by a technical review of current plans, policies and investments to identify where evidence-based action can be scaled up. Regional consultations will be carried out at the same time, starting in the W African region in early July. The GNAP development is a multi-stakeholder process. It is coordinated by a multi-stakeholder Core Group (led by WHO aned UNICEF with PMNCH, BMGF, USAID, LSHTM, Save the Children, the Global Alliance to Prevent Prematurity and Stillbirths, the Children’s Investment Fund Foundation, as well as country government representatives.) An Expanded Reference group/Advisory Group is being formed to provide expert advice and reviews. This group will include country representatives, the private sector, civil society, representatives from other constituencies, as well as additional senior staff from the Core Group of partners. Working groups include an analytical group, an advocacy group and an Implementation group that will start planning the post-launch period so that concrete action follows the Plan launch. Finally, all can be involved online at globalnewbornaction.org Launch will take place in May 2014 in association with the World Health Assembly in Geneva. At the same time, a new Lancet series on neonatal survival will be launched, linking with the analysis and consultations undertaken for this plan. Send your inputs! Join the action!

24 Be part of the action for newborns
#EveryNewborn


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