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EVIDENCE-BASED INTERVENTIONS AND INNOVATIONS TO ADDRESS CHILD HEALTH INEQUITIES

  • Most under-5 deaths can be prevented through proven low-cost interventions.
  • Childhood deaths from diarrhea and pneumonia can be prevented through vaccination and exclusive breastfeeding.
  • Deaths related to undernutrition can be prevented through proper feeding practices.
  • Micronutrient supplementation helps reduce malnutrition-related deaths.
  • Community-based screening and management improve outcomes in malnourished children.
  • Improving maternal, child, and adolescent health requires a life-course approach.
  • Essential health interventions are needed from adolescence through childhood.

HEALTH AND MULTISECTOR ACTIONS

  • Ensure food security for families.
  • Improve maternal education.
  • Provide safe drinking water and sanitation.
  • Promote handwashing with soap.
  • Reduce household air pollution.
  • Provide health education in schools.

ADOLESCENCE AND PRE-PREGNANCY

  • Family planning.
  • Preconception care.

PREGNANCY

  • Appropriate care for normal and high-risk pregnancies.
  • Maternal tetanus vaccination.
  • Antenatal steroids for premature births.
  • Preventive treatment for malaria.

CHILDBIRTH

  • Skilled delivery care.
  • Maternal monitoring during labor.
  • Thermal care for newborns.
  • Clean cord and skin care.
  • Early initiation of breastfeeding.
  • Exclusive breastfeeding from birth.
  • Newborn resuscitation when needed.
  • Special care for premature and low-birth-weight infants.
  • Kangaroo mother care.

POSTNATAL PERIOD

  • Regular postnatal visits.
  • Extra care for small and sick newborns.
  • Early treatment of newborn infections.
  • Support adequate feeding.
  • Manage respiratory complications.

INFANCY AND CHILDHOOD

  • Exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months.
  • Continue breastfeeding with complementary feeding thereafter.
  • Monitor child growth and development.
  • Ensure routine childhood immunization.
  • Provide micronutrient supplementation, including vitamin A.

PREVENTION OF CHILDHOOD DISEASES

  • Prevent malaria through insecticide-treated bed nets.
  • Prevent pneumonia through vaccination and preventive care.
  • Prevent diarrhea through rotavirus vaccination.
  • Prevent meningitis through vaccination.
  • Prevent measles through vaccination.
  • Prevent mother-to-child transmission of infections.

MANAGEMENT OF CHILDHOOD DISEASES

  • Manage severe acute malnutrition.
  • Treat malaria appropriately.
  • Treat pneumonia with proper case management and antibiotics.
  • Treat diarrhea with ORS, zinc, and continued feeding.
  • Treat meningitis with appropriate therapy.
  • Provide vitamin A in measles.
  • Provide comprehensive care for children affected by HIV.

VACCINE-PREVENTABLE DISEASES

  • Vaccines save millions of children’s lives every year.
  • Vaccination is one of the most effective child survival interventions.
  • Many child deaths are still caused by vaccine-preventable diseases.
  • Most vaccine-preventable deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries.
  • Major vaccine-preventable pathogens include:
    • Streptococcus pneumoniae
    • Rotavirus
    • Bordetella pertussis
    • Measles virus
    • Haemophilus influenzae type B (Hib)
    • Influenza virus
  • The WHO Expanded Program on Immunization (EPI) has greatly reduced childhood illness, disability, and death.
  • Immunization programs have nearly eliminated poliomyelitis in many regions.
  • COVID-19 disrupted routine vaccination services worldwide.
  • Reduced vaccination coverage increases the risk of disease outbreaks.

REACHING EVERY CHILD, EVERYWHERE

  • Universal coverage of lifesaving interventions remains a major challenge.
  • Many children still do not receive proven treatments such as oral rehydration therapy.
  • Access to healthcare is influenced by health systems, social factors, and political conditions.
  • Strategies to improve coverage include:
    • Community mapping.
    • Quality improvement programs.
    • Integrated service delivery.
    • Better disease surveillance.
    • Strengthening health systems.

EFFECTIVE DELIVERY STRATEGIES: IMCI

  • Weak health systems limit delivery of lifesaving child health interventions.
  • Common problems include:
    • Shortage of health workers.
    • Poor training and supervision.
    • Weak supply chains.
  • Child health services must be integrated across communities, clinics, and hospitals.
  • Community outreach services remain essential for improving child survival.
  • Community-based interventions are effective, affordable, and improve healthcare-seeking behavior.
  • Community Health Workers (CHWs) play an important role in extending healthcare delivery.
  • Separate disease-specific programs can result in missed opportunities for comprehensive child care.
  • Children often present with multiple overlapping health problems.

INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT OF CHILDHOOD ILLNESS (IMCI)

  • IMCI was developed by UNICEF and WHO to reduce child mortality, illness, and disability.
  • IMCI promotes healthy growth and development.
  • IMCI combines:
    • Health promotion.
    • Disease prevention.
    • Disease treatment.
  • IMCI uses standardized clinical algorithms for case management.
  • Community Health Workers are trained to recognize common childhood illnesses.
  • CHWs identify children needing referral to health facilities.
  • CHWs educate families on home management of illness.
  • CHWs promote:
    • ORS and zinc for diarrhea.
    • Appropriate treatment of malaria.
    • Antibiotics for pneumonia.
    • Bed-net use.
    • Handwashing.
    • Proper infant feeding.
  • IMCI was later expanded to include newborn care and became IMNCI.
  • More than 100 countries have adopted IMNCI.
  • IMNCI improves:
    • Health worker skills.
    • Health systems.
    • Family and community practices.
  • Proper implementation of IMNCI reduces child mortality.
  • Successful implementation requires:
    • Strong government commitment.
    • Adequate health systems.
    • Trained community health workers.
    • Reliable medication supplies.
    • Effective referral systems.
    • Support from international partners.

KEY CONCEPT

  • Most under-5 deaths can be prevented with low-cost evidence-based interventions.
  • Vaccination, breastfeeding, nutrition, sanitation, and early treatment are the foundations of child survival.
  • Community-based healthcare is essential for reaching vulnerable children.
  • Strong health systems are required to deliver lifesaving interventions effectively.
  • IMCI/IMNCI integrates prevention, treatment, and health promotion to reduce child mortality and improve child health.

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