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Newborn health

    Overview
    To ensure every child survives and thrives to reach their full potential, we must focus on improving care around the time of birth and the first week of life.

    The high rates of preventable death and poor health and well-being of newborns and children under the age of five are indicators of the uneven coverage of life-saving interventions and, more broadly, of inadequate social and economic development. Poverty, poor nutrition and insufficient access to clean water and sanitation are all harmful factors, as is insufficient access to quality health services such as essential care for newborns. 

    Health promotion, disease prevention services (such as vaccinations) and treatment of common childhood illnesses are essential if children are to thrive as well as survive.

     

    Impact

    Newborn deaths account for 47% of deaths among children under the age of 5 globally, resulting in 2.4 million lives lost each year. About one third of newborn deaths occur on the day of birth and close to three quarters occur within the first week of life. In addition, almost 2 million babies born with no signs of life at 28 weeks of pregnancy or more (stillbirths) and 295 000 maternal deaths occur each year.

    Children who die within the first 28 days of birth suffer from conditions and diseases associated with lack of quality care at birth or skilled care and treatment immediately after birth and in the first days of life. The vast majority of newborn deaths take place in low and middle-income countries.

    WHO response

    In 2014, 194 Member States of the Sixty-seventh World Health Assembly endorsed the action plan (Resolution WHA67.10). Led by UNICEF and the World Health Organization, Every Newborn Action Plan (ENAP) was guided by the advice of experts and partners and by multistakeholder consultations and a web-based consultation with over 300 comments from stakeholders. The WHO Director-General has been requested to monitor progress towards the achievement of the global goal and targets, reporting periodically to the World Health Assembly until 2030.

    Twenty-eight focus countries were targeted for data collection through the use of a progress tracking tool. This systematic tracking of progress enables the assessment of the status of implementation of ENAP strategies, maps technical assistance needs and identifies barriers to implementation in line with the ENAP milestones and recommendations.

    Another area of work is the Quality of Care Network. The main objective of the network is broadening the focus from access to care to include quality of care for maternal, newborn and child health to cut preventable maternal and newborn illness and deaths, and to improve every mother’s experience of care.

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    Strengthening home-based records implementation

    Strengthening home-based records implementation

    WHO/Nadège Mazars
    Administrative documents and blank COVID-19 vaccine records at the vaccination site in the indigenous community of Concordia, Colombia on 16 March 2021.
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    Overview

    Home-based records are documents that track an individual's history of health services. These records, kept at home in either paper or electronic format, are brought to health visits for updates by health workers. They complement the records maintained by health facilities and are an important component of maternal, newborn, and child health services, including immunizations and nutrition.

    Home-based records have evolved significantly. Initially used in the mid-1800s for smallpox vaccination proof, they later documented health services and education for mothers in Japan during the mid-1900s. Today, many countries use various forms of these records, from simple vaccination cards to comprehensive maternal, newborn, and child health handbooks.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends the use of home-based records, to complement health facility records, for the care of pregnant women, mothers, newborns and children to improve care-seeking behaviours, men’s involvement and support in the household, maternal and child home care practices, infant and child feeding, and communication between health workers and women, parents and caregivers.

    Despite their benefits, implementation of home-based records faces several challenges, including:

    • Stockouts due to poor planning or lack of funds.
    • Inadequate use by health workers.
    • Poor retention by families.
    • Low-quality printed records.
    • Designs that do not meet user needs.

    Home-based records can inadvertently contribute to inequities, such as requiring payment for records or denying school entry without vaccination proof.

    To address these challenges, WHO, UNICEF, and the Japan International Cooperation Agency developed a guide titled "Strengthening implementation of home-based records for maternal, newborn, and child health". This guide offers tools and activities to strengthen planning, content selection, design, implementation, and monitoring of home-based records.

     

     

    Key facts

    27 countries reported home-based record stockouts at national level through the WHO/UNICEF Joint Reporting Form in 2022.

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