Niger Delta
High Infant Mortality Rate Worries Bayelsa
The Bayelsa State Government has expressed worry over the alarming and worrisome rate of under-five deaths from preventable causes in the state.
The state Commissioner for Health, Dr Pabara Newton Igwele, made this known Saturday in Yenagoa, the state capital, during the ministry’s launch of Every Newborn Action Plan (ENAP) in collaboration with the United Nations Children Emergency Fund (UNICEF).
Igwele, represented by the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Health, Dr Inodu Apoku, said about 3,500 newborns died in their first month of life in the state from preventable causes, noting that it was one of the highest in the South-South region.
He said: “In 2008 for instance, Bayelsa State had 64,000 babies delivered, out of which 3,500 died in their first month of life. At the time, Bayelsa had the highest under-5 mortality rate in the Southsouth of the country with 95 deaths per 1,000 live births.
“At present, when compared with the 2011 records, there has been a marked improvement on the number of under-5 mortality. Despite this, the decline in newborn mortality rate has been considerably low as newborn deaths still account for 31 per cent of the total child mortality.
“The percentage of deaths is becoming very embarrassing and in the South-South, Bayelsa State is the worst and they die from preventable causes.”
He said the call to action which provides the framework for the development of the Nigerian Every Newborn Action Plan (NiENAP) provided the platform for situational analysis into newborn health in the state.
Igwele said the launch of ENAP would be the action plan that would mitigate the causes that are responsible for the deaths of children when they are born.
He called on all critical stakeholders, partners, civil society organisations, private sector, among others, to work with the government at all levels in implementing the plan.
“All hands must be on deck to ensure that newborns in the state not only breath at birth, but survive and thrive to reach their full potential in life,” the commissioner appealed.
In her contribution, the wife of Bayelsa State Governor, Dr Gloria Diri, said the well-being of the mother and child is key in realising safe care before, during pregnancy and after the delivery hence all necessary means be employed to provide the enabling environment for the rendering of health care services.
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