For 1 million babies worldwide every year, their day of birth
is also their day of death
Photo courtesy of APO |
#UNICEF and The #Philips Foundation together with Concern
Worldwide, Maker and Gearbox, have launched the Maternal and Newborn Health
Innovations Project, to help save lives and improve the health of pregnant
women and children in Kenya.
Under the leadership of the Government of Kenya and the
Project’s Steering Committee at the Ministry of Health, UNICEF and The Philips
Foundation will facilitate the development of innovative health technology and
solutions in the field of maternal, newborn and child health.
This cooperation will help catalyse novel health
interventions for the benefit of the most vulnerable mothers and children, and
contribute to reducing the number of deaths of pregnant women and their newborn
babies. This investment is in keeping with the Government of Kenya’s commitment
to investing in innovative, home-grown solutions for maternal and newborn
health care.
In developing countries such as Kenya, maternal, newborn and child mortality rates remain unacceptably high. Kenya has reduced under-five child deaths per 1,000 lives from 90 in 2003 to 52 in 2014, but this still falls short of the Millennium Development Goal 4 target of 33 by the end of 2015.
In developing countries such as Kenya, maternal, newborn and child mortality rates remain unacceptably high. Kenya has reduced under-five child deaths per 1,000 lives from 90 in 2003 to 52 in 2014, but this still falls short of the Millennium Development Goal 4 target of 33 by the end of 2015.
Neonatal
mortality is also too high at 22 deaths per 1,000 live births. One significant cause of these deaths is the lack of medical
equipment and technology to support even the most basic interventions for
pregnant women and their newborns, especially in remote areas where health care
workers lack essential medical resources.
“For 1 million babies worldwide every year, their day of
birth is also their day of death,” said Sharad Sapra, UNICEF Director of the
UNICEF Global Innovation Centre. “But with strengthened health systems and
innovative solutions for both mothers and children, the chance for survival is
greatly increased.”
The project was launched ahead of the September 25-27 United
Nations Summit for the Adoption of the Post-2015 Development Agenda, where
UNICEF is promoting greater involvement of the private sector in improving
children’s lives.
The Millennium Development Goals expire at the end of 2015
and are being replaced by the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that
represent a new set of targets for international development.
The Philips
Foundation and UNICEF will promote innovation and technology as a key strategy
to realize the new SDGs and improve the lives of women and children where most
needed. With the global presence of organizations, worldwide engagement and
scale is at the centre of the partnership.
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