Child deaths cut by half since 2000

World
Child deaths cut by  half since 2000
Six million children worldwide died last year from preventable diseases and other complications, which was about half the number of similar deaths in 2000 when nations endorsed goals to end extreme poverty, the United Nations said on Tuesday. 

World leaders adopted the UN's Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in 2000, a year in which 11.2 million children belowun age 15 died from preventable diseases, a lack of clean water, malnutrition and during birth. That number fell to 6.3 million in 2017 - or one child dying every five seconds - according to the UN children's agency, UNICEF, which published Tuesday's report along with other agencies and the World Bank. 

"Millions of babies and children should not still be dying every year from lack of access to water, sanitation, proper nutrition or basic health services," said Princess Simelela of the World Health Organization. Most deaths last year - 5.4 million - were children below the age of five, according to the report, which also found that babies born in sub-Saharan African or South Asian nations were nine times more likely to die than those from richer countries.
 
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