Abstract

ABSTRACTBackground: During the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) era, impressive reductions in the under-5 mortality rate (U5MR) have been observed, although the MDG 4 target was not met. So far, cause-specific progress in child mortality has been analyzed and discussed mainly at the global and regional levels.Objectives: We aimed to explore annual changes in cause-specific mortality at the country level, assess which causes contributed the most to child mortality reduction in 2000–2015, and estimate how many child lives were saved.Methods: We used the cause-specific child mortality estimates published by Liu and colleagues. We derived average annual changes in cause-specific child mortality rates and cause-specific contribution to overall child mortality in 2000–2015. We estimated the number of cause-specific child deaths averted during the MDG era, assuming that cause-specific child mortality remained the same as in 2000. We targeted the 75 Countdown countries where 95% of maternal and child deaths occurred during the MDG era.Results: Wide disparities existed across causes within countries, both in neonatal and post-neonatal mortality reduction, except for a few countries such as China, Rwanda, and Cambodia. In 20 of the 45 sub-Saharan African countries, malaria was the main contributor to post-neonatal mortality reduction, and pneumonia was the main contributor in only six countries. A single disease often contributed to a substantial proportion of the child mortality reduction, particularly in west and central African countries. Diarrhea-specific post-neonatal child mortality reduction accounted for 7.1 million averted child deaths (24.5%), while pneumonia accounted for another 6.7 million averted child deaths (23%).Conclusions: This study demonstrates country-specific characteristics with regards to cause-wise child mortality that could not be identified by global or regional analyses. These findings provide the global community with evidence for formulating national policies and strategies to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals in child mortality reduction.

Highlights

  • During the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) era, impressive reductions in the under-5 mortality rate (U5MR) have been observed, the MDG 4 target was not met

  • For pneumonia, unlike the substantial proportion of countries with successful performance among post-neonatal children, only 25.3% (19 of 75) of the Countdown countries succeeded in meeting the anticipated annual changes in neonatal mortality

  • Slow progress or unmet MDG targets could be mainly attributable to neonatal mortality, the majority of the Countdown countries made substantial progress in cause-specific neonatal mortality reductions for tetanus (94.7%) and diarrhea (78.7%)

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Summary

Introduction

During the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) era, impressive reductions in the under-5 mortality rate (U5MR) have been observed, the MDG 4 target was not met. Objectives: We aimed to explore annual changes in cause-specific mortality at the country level, assess which causes contributed the most to child mortality reduction in 2000–2015, and estimate how many child lives were saved. The main focus of the Global Burden of Disease Study [6,7,8,12] (GBD) has been to examine disease burden in terms of magnitude, distribution, and comparison by region or by year, while the cause-specific mortality fraction among overall child deaths and annual changes were mainly investigated for the overall U5MR. Global communities have become increasingly interested in investigating cause-specific progress (i.e. the annual change in mortality reduction) [1,4]; such analyses have been restricted to the global or regional level, and have not been conducted at the country level

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