TY - JOUR
T1 - From evidence to action to deliver a healthy start for the next generation
AU - Mason, Elizabeth
AU - McDougall, Lori
AU - Lawn, Joy E.
AU - Gupta, Anuradha
AU - Claeson, Mariam
AU - Pillay, Yogan
AU - Presern, Carole
AU - Lukong, Martina Baye
AU - Mann, Gillian
AU - Wijnroks, Marijke
AU - Azad, Kishwar
AU - Taylor, Katherine
AU - Beattie, Allison
AU - Bhutta, Zulfiqar A.
AU - Chopra, Mickey
N1 - Funding Information:
No specific funding was received for the work in this paper, but the Every Newborn Action Plan and The Lancet Every Newborn Series process and products are funded through a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to the US Fund for UNICEF. The content of this paper does not necessarily reflect the views of the author's organisations. We appreciate the valuable contributions of Every Newborn teams to the conceptual development and review of this paper including the Study Group, the Steering team, and the Advisory Group, as well as the many individuals, governments, and organisations that have given their ideas and criticism to strengthen the content. We particularly acknowledge the contributions of Rajiv Bahl, John Borrazzo, Bernadette Daelmans, Lily Kak, Viviana Mangiaterra, Lee Pyne-Mercier, Mathilde Pinto, Juana Willumsen, and Severin von Xylander. We thank Anshu Mohan and Shyama Kuruvilla for the help with the India panel presented in this paper, and to the Every Newborn metrics working group for its development of the impact framework, milestones, and indicators presented in this paper; members of the Every Newborn metrics working group include Joy E Lawn, Matthews Mathai, Aline Simen Kapeu, Suzanne Fournier, John Grove, as well as Lara Vaz and Kate Kerber for the Newborn Indicators Technical Working Group, with the support of Hannah Blencowe.
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Remarkable progress has been made towards halving of maternal deaths and deaths of children aged 1-59 months, although the task is incomplete. Newborn deaths and stillbirths were largely invisible in the Millennium Development Goals, and have continued to fall between maternal and child health efforts, with much slower reduction. This Series and the Every Newborn Action Plan outline mortality goals for newborn babies (ten or fewer per 1000 livebirths) and stillbirths (ten or fewer per 1000 total births) by 2035, aligning with A Promise Renewed target for children and the vision of Every Woman Every Child. To focus political attention and improve performance, goals for newborn babies and stillbirths must be recognised in the post-2015 framework, with corresponding accountability mechanisms. The four previous papers in this Every Newborn Series show the potential for a triple return on investment around the time of birth: averting maternal and newborn deaths and preventing stillbirths. Beyond survival, being counted and optimum nutrition and development is a human right for all children, including those with disabilities. Improved human capital brings economic productivity. Efforts to reach every woman and every newborn baby, close gaps in coverage, and improve equity and quality for antenatal, intrapartum, and postnatal care, especially in the poorest countries and for underserved populations, need urgent attention. We have prioritised what needs to be done differently on the basis of learning from the past decade about what has worked, and what has not. Needed now are four most important shifts: (1) intensification of political attention and leadership; (2) promotion of parent voice, supporting women, families, and communities to speak up for their newborn babies and to challenge social norms that accept these deaths as inevitable; (3) investment for effect on mortality outcome as well as harmonisation of funding; (4) implementation at scale, with particular attention to increasing of health worker numbers and skills with attention to high-quality childbirth care for newborn babies as well as mothers and children; and (5) evaluation, tracking coverage of priority interventions and packages of care with clear accountability to accelerate progress and reach the poorest groups. The Every Newborn Action Plan provides an evidence-based roadmap towards care for every woman, and a healthy start for every newborn baby, with a right to be counted, survive, and thrive wherever they are born.
AB - Remarkable progress has been made towards halving of maternal deaths and deaths of children aged 1-59 months, although the task is incomplete. Newborn deaths and stillbirths were largely invisible in the Millennium Development Goals, and have continued to fall between maternal and child health efforts, with much slower reduction. This Series and the Every Newborn Action Plan outline mortality goals for newborn babies (ten or fewer per 1000 livebirths) and stillbirths (ten or fewer per 1000 total births) by 2035, aligning with A Promise Renewed target for children and the vision of Every Woman Every Child. To focus political attention and improve performance, goals for newborn babies and stillbirths must be recognised in the post-2015 framework, with corresponding accountability mechanisms. The four previous papers in this Every Newborn Series show the potential for a triple return on investment around the time of birth: averting maternal and newborn deaths and preventing stillbirths. Beyond survival, being counted and optimum nutrition and development is a human right for all children, including those with disabilities. Improved human capital brings economic productivity. Efforts to reach every woman and every newborn baby, close gaps in coverage, and improve equity and quality for antenatal, intrapartum, and postnatal care, especially in the poorest countries and for underserved populations, need urgent attention. We have prioritised what needs to be done differently on the basis of learning from the past decade about what has worked, and what has not. Needed now are four most important shifts: (1) intensification of political attention and leadership; (2) promotion of parent voice, supporting women, families, and communities to speak up for their newborn babies and to challenge social norms that accept these deaths as inevitable; (3) investment for effect on mortality outcome as well as harmonisation of funding; (4) implementation at scale, with particular attention to increasing of health worker numbers and skills with attention to high-quality childbirth care for newborn babies as well as mothers and children; and (5) evaluation, tracking coverage of priority interventions and packages of care with clear accountability to accelerate progress and reach the poorest groups. The Every Newborn Action Plan provides an evidence-based roadmap towards care for every woman, and a healthy start for every newborn baby, with a right to be counted, survive, and thrive wherever they are born.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84906057699
U2 - 10.1016/S0140-6736(14)60750-9
DO - 10.1016/S0140-6736(14)60750-9
M3 - Review article
C2 - 24853599
AN - SCOPUS:84906057699
SN - 0140-6736
VL - 384
SP - 455
EP - 467
JO - The Lancet
JF - The Lancet
IS - 9941
ER -