Pneumonia Leading Killer of Children Despite Decline in Global Child Deaths

Pneumonia Leading Killer of Children Despite Decline in Global Child Deaths

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: November 12, 2012

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Mala Persaud
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Pneumonia Remains the Leading Killer of Children Despite Decline in Global Child Deaths

PNEUMONIA STILL NUMBER ONE KILLER

But there are simple solutions, say global health leaders

(BALTIMORE, MARYLAND) – Marking the fourth annual World Pneumonia Day, November 12th, world leaders and the Global Coalition Against Child Pneumonia are calling for major efforts in the fight against childhood pneumonia, which remains the number one killer of children under age five. Pneumonia claimed 1.3 million lives in 2011 alone, and was responsible for nearly one in five global child deaths.

“Pneumonia can be prevented and cured.  Yet, for too long it has been the leading cause of global deaths among children.  We know what to do, and we have made great progress – but we must do more.  We must scale-up proven solutions and ensure they reach every child in need,” said United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who spearheads Every Woman Every Child, an umbrella movement that has leveraged more than $20 billion in new money for women’s and children’s health and aims to save 16 million lives by 2015.

Investments in preventing, treating, and protecting children against pneumonia have contributed to significant declines in child mortality over the last decade, but access to healthcare facilities and treatment remains out of reach for many children in the developing world, where 99 percent of deaths from pneumonia occur.  According to the Global Coalition Against Child Pneumonia, country leaders and funders must prioritize efforts and investments in proven interventions, including access to vaccines, proper antibiotic treatment, and improved sanitation, as well as the promotion of practices such as exclusive breastfeeding, frequent hand washing, care seeking, and the use of clean cookstoves to reduce indoor air pollution. Several of these interventions also help address the second leading killer of children – diarrhea.

For pneumonia cases that do occur, antibiotics such as amoxicillin are one of the simplest and least expensive methods of treatment. However, antibiotics are administered to less than one third of children with suspected pneumonia, and only a tiny minority receives amoxicillin in the ideal form for small children: a tablet that dissolves in a very small amount of liquid or breast milk. According to the UN Commission on Life-saving Commodities for Women and Children, making amoxicillin available in a dissolvable tablet form to the children most at risk of dying from pneumonia would potentially save 1.56 million children over five years.

According to a Pneumonia Progress Report released today by the International Vaccine Access Center (IVAC) at Johns Hopkins, 75 percent of all childhood pneumonia deaths worldwide occur in just 15 countries, demonstrating the impact we can have with targeted efforts. The report also notes that none of these countries have reached the 90 percent coverage targets for key pneumonia interventions recommended in the Global Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of Pneumonia (GAPP).

GAPP, issued by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) in 2009, specified that child pneumonia deaths could be reduced by two-thirds if three child health interventions – breastfeeding, vaccination and case management including the provision of appropriate antibiotics – were scaled up to reach 90 percent of the world’s children.

Over the past three years, the GAVI Alliance has assisted over 20 countries to introduce the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, which prevents the most common cause of childhood pneumonia.  While progress is being made, currently only 7 of the 15 countries profiled in IVAC’s report have vaccine coverage levels at or above 80 percent.  Coverage of breastfeeding and access to antibiotics are similarly low in most countries.

Key to getting vaccines and treatments to the children who need them most are frontline health workers, who are the first and often only link to healthcare for many children. However, WHO estimates there is currently a shortage of at least one million frontline health workers, particularly in Africa and parts of Asia. Efforts such as Save the Children’s Every Beat Matters campaign are bringing attention to this shortage to spur action.

Events commemorating the fourth annual World Pneumonia Day will be held in nearly a dozen countries, including Argentina, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana, Haiti, India, Nigeria, Philippines, the United States and Zambia.  In the U.S., landmarks in 15 cities will shine blue lights to raise awareness in their communities of the scourge of childhood pneumonia and what U.S. citizens can do to help. Participating buildings include the Wrigley Building (Chicago), Trump Towers SoHo (New York City) and Pacific Science Center (Seattle), among others.  For more information about World Pneumonia Day and its activities, please visit dev-stoppneumonia.pantheonsite.io.

The Global Coalition Against Child Pneumonia was established in 2009 to raise awareness about the toll of pneumonia, the world’s leading killer of children, and to advocate for global action to protect against, effectively treat and help prevent this deadly illness. Comprised of over 140 non-governmental organizations, civil society organizations, academic institutions, government agencies and foundations, the Coalition provides leadership for World Pneumonia Day, marked every year on November 12th.

 

Press Release Quote Sheet

PNEUMONIA REMAINS THE LEADING KILLER OF CHILDREN DESPITE DECLINE IN GLOBAL CHILD DEATHS

Photo: UN Photo / Eskinder Debebe

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon

“Pneumonia can be prevented and cured.  Yet, for too long it has been the leading cause of global deaths among children.  We know what to do, and we have made great progress – but we must do more.  We must scale-up proven solutions and ensure they reach every child in need,” said UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who spearheads Every Woman Every Child, an umbrella movement that has leveraged more than $20 billion in new money for women’s and children’s health and aims to save 16 million lives by 2015.

Photo: GAVI / Olivier Asselin

GAVI Alliance CEO Seth Berkley

“Pneumonia is a painful disease that claims the lives of over a million children every year,” said Dr. Seth Berkley, CEO of the GAVI Alliance, “We have the tools to change this. The GAVI Alliance is taking the lead in ensuring that countries that want to vaccinate their children against pneumococcal disease, one of the leading causes of pneumonia, are supported to do so.”

Photo: UNICEF / NYHQ2010-0697 / Markisz

UNICEF Executive Director Anthony Lake

“Today, pneumonia will kill thousands of children.  And tomorrow.  Every day. It is unconscionable that each year 1.3 million die from such a preventable disease.  This need not be so,” said Dr. Anthony Lake, Executive Director of UNICEF. “There are simple, low cost solutions, such as hand washing with soap, vaccines and treatment like amoxicillin that can save these children’s lives. So what possible excuse can there be for a failure to do still more in the fight against this killer of children?”

Photo: Keith Weller

IVAC Acting Director Kate O’Brien

“IVAC’s Pneumonia Progress Report, issued today, indicates that while vital coverage of vaccines is improving in the countries hardest hit by childhood pneumonia, rates of breastfeeding and access to care remain low,” said Dr. Kate O’Brien, Acting Director of the International Vaccine Access Center at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. “If the 90% pneumonia intervention targets are reached, we could save the life of one child nearly every minute.”

Photo: USAID

USAID Administrator Raj Shah

“Today, the global community has the knowledge and the affordable tools to change the course of history,” said Dr. Raj Shah, USAID Administrator. “For less than fifty cents, a treatment course of life-saving antibiotics can be provided to a child with pneumonia. We can end preventable child deaths, ensuring millions of children reach their 5th birthday.  Ensuring that no family needlessly suffers the loss of a child would be one of the great moral victories of our time.   It would also be a great economic victory, because it helps lower population growth, and, through the demographic dividend, accelerate economic growth.”