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One in ten Afghan children die before age 5 - survey

by Reuters
Wednesday, 30 November 2011 14:40 GMT

KABUL, Nov 30 (Reuters) - One Afghan child in ten will die before their fifth birthday, the Ministry of Public Health said on Thursday, as it launched its first report into mortality in a country that after years of conflict has some of the world&${esc.hash}39;s worst rates of early death.

The Afghanistan Mortality Survey found the highest childhood mortality rates occurred in children born into poorer families in rural areas.

Around half of deaths of under-fives were caused by respiratory infections or infectious and parasitic diseases, the survey found. Nearly a quarter of city dwellers and half of the rural population do not have access to clean drinking water.

Recent data from UNICEF showed Afghanistan had the second highest mortality rate for under-fives in the world.

Average life expectancy for all Afghans was 62, but nearly half of Afghanistan&${esc.hash}39;s population is under the age of 15.

Among men, one-fifth of deaths were caused by injury, which caused around half of male deaths between the ages of 15-59. These were equally split between accidental injuries and wounds caused by war and violence, acting Minister of Health Suraya Dalil told a news conference to present the survey.

Infections were the leading cause of death among women, causing around one third of fatalities, it found.

Maternal mortality rates, which three years ago the World Health Organisation found were the world&${esc.hash}39;s worst, have improved, the survey found. It gave a maternal mortality ratio of 327 per 100,000 births, against a 2008 WHO figure of 1,400 per 100,000.

However, the producers of the survey of just over 22,000 households conceded that its results were biased towards urban and more secure areas, while deaths of women and children remain under-reported.

Many areas in southern provinces, which have seen heavy fighting in recent years, could not be surveyed.

"The survey shows evidence that maternal mortality can be reduced in a country like Afghanistan," Dalil told Reuters after the presentation.

"It shows that our strategies on educating midwives on emergency obstetric care, on family planning have worked. However, it also tells us that there is a long way ahead of us, and we have many challenges ahead."

She said the department would continue to focus on educating midwives, particularly in rural areas. Dalil admitted the results of the survey were less than comprehensive.

"This is the best estimate we have," she said. "We couldn&${esc.hash}39;t cover the whole country. We wanted to cover 24,000 households, but we could only go to 22,000. We couldn&${esc.hash}39;t cover a third of the population in the south." (Reporting by Jan Harvey; Editing by Ron Popeski)

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