Home / Health / Child Deaths Stall: UN Warns of Global Health Crisis
Child Deaths Stall: UN Warns of Global Health Crisis
18 Mar
Summary
- Nearly 4.9 million children under five died in 2024.
- Most deaths were preventable with basic healthcare access.
- Global aid cuts threaten to reverse child survival progress.
New United Nations estimates reveal that approximately 4.9 million children died before their fifth birthday in 2024. This figure indicates a significant slowdown in the progress made to reduce child mortality rates globally.
The majority of these tragic deaths were preventable, stemming from issues like pre-term birth complications or diseases such as malaria. Access to better healthcare and simple interventions could have saved millions of young lives.
While preventable child deaths have decreased by more than half since 2000, agencies like UNICEF, the World Bank, WHO, and the UN population division note that progress has decelerated since 2015.
This stalling trend is exacerbated by recent global aid budget cuts, with major donors reducing their international assistance. The WHO warns that conflict, economic instability, and climate change also contribute to this concerning situation.
These combined pressures risk undoing past achievements in child survival. UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell expressed grave concern, stating that no child should die from preventable diseases, especially as budget cuts mount.




