1. Accueil
  2. Southern Africa
  3. Angola

Diarrhoea – deadly and neglected, report says

Child at a centre for refugees requiring medical treatment, Guinean capital, Conakry. October 2007. Nancy Palus/IRIN
The international aid system is contributing to millions of preventable child deaths by neglecting illnesses most deadly to under-five children such as diarrhoea, according to a report by the UK-based international non-profit Wateraid.

In ‘Fatal Neglect’, Wateraid says the aid system must target resources to diseases that pose the greatest burden to a population, like diarrhoea caused by poor sanitation.

Significantly more funding goes to fighting HIV and malaria – two other main killers of children – than to fighting diarrhoea, even though diarrhoea kills more children worldwide than HIV and malaria combined, according to Wateraid. The organisation says it does not imply that tackling diarrhoea should come at the expense of these other diseases. “Rather, this paper questions how and why the international aid system is overlooking one of the biggest killers of children.”

Henry Northover, Wateraid head of policy, told IRIN: “We need a system that analyses the disease burden and looks at the greatest causes of poor health. What we are seeing rather is a health system that focuses on the treatment of symptoms rather than causes.”

He added: “We are dealing with a blind spot in the donor community; they see getting sanitation right as an end piece of the development process rather than, as history shows, it serving as a critical driver of poverty eradication efforts.”

Wateraid and other health experts say safe water and sanitation are fundamental to health and poverty reduction.

The report says disease-specific funding mechanisms can distort national health priorities. Rather Wateraid calls for "the health system to be strengthened in such a way that no critical determinant of child health [such as sanitation] can be neglected.”

The World Health Organization (WHO) in a ‘report card’ on Millennium Development Goals (MDG) progress released on 21 May said 9 million under-five children died in 2007, down from an estimated 12.5 million in 1990, the year against which MDG progress is measured. WHO says: "However, in many African countries and in low-income countries generally, progress has been insufficient to reach the MDG target that aims for a two-thirds reduction in child mortality by the year 2015.”

np/aj

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

Partager cet article

Get the day’s top headlines in your inbox every morning

Starting at just $5 a month, you can become a member of The New Humanitarian and receive our premium newsletter, DAWNS Digest.

DAWNS Digest has been the trusted essential morning read for global aid and foreign policy professionals for more than 10 years.

Government, media, global governance organisations, NGOs, academics, and more subscribe to DAWNS to receive the day’s top global headlines of news and analysis in their inboxes every weekday morning.

It’s the perfect way to start your day.

Become a member of The New Humanitarian today and you’ll automatically be subscribed to DAWNS Digest – free of charge.

Become a member of The New Humanitarian

Support our journalism and become more involved in our community. Help us deliver informative, accessible, independent journalism that you can trust and provides accountability to the millions of people affected by crises worldwide.

Join