Elsevier

The Lancet

Volume 361, Issue 9351, 4 January 2003, Page 1
The Lancet

Editorial
The world's forgotten children

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(03)12101-0Get rights and content

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    Most of the 9.7 million deaths in this age group could have been prevented with simple proven public health services to reduce mortality from diarrhoea and pneumonia (approximately 2 million children each), malaria (almost 1 million), and measles, tuberculosis and HIV (hundreds of thousands)9 (Fig. 1). One quarter of the world’s children aged under two years have not been immunised against diphtheria, pertussis and tetanus; 40% do not receive appropriate antibiotics for pneumonia; 58% are not exclusively breast fed during the first four months of life; over half do not receive the needed vitamin A supplementation; one-third do not have access to iodised salt; and one quarter have malnutrition, a major contributor to childhood death.8,10–12 Mosley and Chen proposed a policy framework for understanding childhood illness comprising ‘distal’ socioeconomic factors such as education and income, which influence incidence and outcomes through five groups of ‘proximal’ causes (maternal factors, nutrient deficiency, environmental contamination, injury and personal illness control), determined by availability and access to health care services.13–17

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