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Covid, conflict grave threat to Women and Child progress

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Covid 19, climate change and conflicts are adversely affecting the gains made over the past decade to advance women and children’s health, according to a new report from Every Women Every Child.

The report “Protect the Progress” said that more children lived to see their first birthday than at any time in history at the start of 2020. Child mortality fell by 50 per cent since 2000. Maternal mortality and child marriages were on the decline and more girls went to school, the report said.  However, it said that the progress achieved did not reach every woman and child. “The gains have proven fragile and the future is now uncertain,” the report said.

Since the launch of Every Woman Every Child programme ten year ago, the world has achieved significant gains in maternal, newborn and child health and well-being. However, these advances were not evenly distributed across the world, and the great progress did not reach every woman and child, the report said.

The report notes that in 2019:

Conflict situations:

The report points out that women and children are most vulnerable in conflict situations.

Climate change

COVID-19

The report also mentions that discrimination, abuse and violence against women, children and adolescents continued to erode physical and mental health.

Meanwhile, UN Deputy Chief Amina Mohammed said that women and children were the foundation of the communities and future. “Plans to respond to and recover from COVID-19 must prioritize their rights, and ensure continued access to services that support health, access to clean water, nutrition and education.

“While much is still unknown and uncertain, our collective goal endures: for women, children and adolescents everywhere to survive and thrive and for their lives to be transformed”, Amina Mohammed said.

UNICEF Executive director Henrietta Fore said that millions of children living in conflict zones and fragile settings faced even greater hardship with the onset of the pandemic. “We need to work collectively to meet immediate needs caused by the pandemic while also strengthening health systems. Only then can we protect and save lives,” Fore said.

Former New Zealand Prime Minister and Board Chair of the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health, Helen Clark opined that the health and rights of women, children, and adolescents had received insufficient attention and services. “We call on all partners to work together to support governments to strengthen health systems and tackle the inequities that constrain progress,” Clark said.

Narrowing the gap

The report from Every Women Every Child called upon global community to fight COVID-19 while honouring and respecting commitments that can improve the lives of women and children, and not widen the gap between promise and reality.

COVID-19 pandemic threatened to turn back the clock on years of progress in reproductive, maternal, child and adolescent health, said Muhammad Ali Pate, Global Director for Health, Nutrition and Population at the World Bank Group.

The report calls for

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