The world cannot afford to fail women, children and adolescents
Briefly

The world cannot afford to fail women, children and adolescents
"Aid cuts, debt and conflict are pushing maternal and child health to breaking point. The cost of inaction is far higher than the cost of acting now. In too many parts of the world, giving birth still comes with more fear than hope: a clinic without electricity, a nurse without supplies, a mother who knows that giving life may cost her own. These fears are not merely emotional, they are borne out by the facts."
"Every two minutes worldwide, a woman dies while giving life. Every year, nearly five million children do not live to see their fifth birthday. A toll that will rise if aid cuts continue. The Lancet medical journal estimates that by 2030, more than 14 million additional people could die, including 4.5 million children under five the equivalent of erasing a city the size of Abuja, Brasilia or Rome."
"The true measure of global progress is not found in financial markets or summit declarations. It is found in whether a woman survives pregnancy and childbirth, whether a child is vaccinated and nourished, and whether an adolescent can grow up healthy, safe and hopeful. When women, children and adolescents thrive, societies are stronger, economies are more resilient, and nations are better prepared for the future."
"This is why investing in women's, children's and adolescents' health is one of the most important investments any government can make. The evidence is overwhelming. Closing the gap in women's health alone could add at least $1 trillion to the global economy every year by 2040. Every dollar invested in childhood vaccination or adolescent mental health returns about $20 over a lifetime in healthcare savings, in productivity, in lives that go on to build something."
Aid cuts, debt, and conflict are pushing maternal and child health to breaking point. Giving birth in many places still involves fear rather than hope, including clinics without electricity, nurses without supplies, and mothers facing the risk of death. Maternal mortality remains extremely high, with a woman dying every two minutes during childbirth. Nearly five million children die each year before reaching age five, and the toll is expected to rise if aid cuts continue. Estimates project that by 2030 more than 14 million additional people could die, including 4.5 million children under five. Progress is measured by survival and health outcomes, and investing in women’s, children’s, and adolescents’ health strengthens societies and economies while delivering high returns.
Read at www.aljazeera.com
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