South African child deaths 1990–2011: have HIV services reversed the trend enough to meet Millennium Development Goal 4?

KJ Kerber, JE Lawn, LF Johnson, M Mahy… - Aids, 2013 - journals.lww.com
KJ Kerber, JE Lawn, LF Johnson, M Mahy, RE Dorrington, H Phillips, D Bradshaw
Aids, 2013journals.lww.com
Objective: To analyse trends in under-five mortality rate in South Africa (1990–2011),
particularly the contribution of AIDS deaths. Methods: Three nationally used models for
estimating AIDS deaths in children were systematically reviewed. The model outputs were
compared with under-five mortality rate estimates for South Africa from two global estimation
models. All estimates were compared with available empirical data. Results: Differences
between the models resulted in varying point estimates for under-five mortality but the trends …
Abstract
Objective:
To analyse trends in under-five mortality rate in South Africa (1990–2011), particularly the contribution of AIDS deaths.
Methods:
Three nationally used models for estimating AIDS deaths in children were systematically reviewed. The model outputs were compared with under-five mortality rate estimates for South Africa from two global estimation models. All estimates were compared with available empirical data.
Results:
Differences between the models resulted in varying point estimates for under-five mortality but the trends were similar, with mortality increasing to a peak around 2005. The three models showing the contribution of AIDS suggest a maximum of 37–39% of child deaths were due to AIDS in 2004–2005 which has since declined. Although the rate of progress from 1990 is not the 4.4% needed to meet Millennium Development Goal 4 for child survival, South Africa's average annual rate of under-five mortality decline between 2006 and 2011 was between 6.3 and 10.2%.
Conclusion:
In 2005, South Africa was one of only four countries globally with an under-five mortality rate higher than the 1990 Millennium Development Goal baseline. Over the past 5 years, the country has achieved a rate of child mortality reduction exceeded by only three other countries. This rapid turnaround is likely due to scale-up of prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV, and to a lesser degree, the expanded roll-out of antiretroviral therapy. Emphasis on these programmes must continue, but failure to address other aspects of care including integrated high-quality maternal and neonatal care means that the decline in child mortality could stall.
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果