Tuesday, 19th March 2024
To guardian.ng
Search

Nigeria tops global pneumonia mortality with 162,000 deaths yearly

By Joke Falaju, Abuja
12 November 2019   |   4:29 am
With an estimated 162,000 children that reportedly died of pneumonia in Nigeria in 2018, the country has been said to have the highest number of pneumonia deaths globally.

Ogun State Governor, Prince Dapo Abiodun (left); National Chairman, All Progressives Congress, APC, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole; Executive Chairman, Geregu Power Plc, Femi Otedola; his daughter, Florence, aka DJ Cuppy, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo;  Lagos State Governor  Babajide Sanwo-Olu and Minister of Women Affairs, Dame Pauline Tallen during the inaugural Gold Gala by the Cuppy Foundation  where  Otedola donated N5 billion to Cuppy Foundation  to support the work of  “SAVE THE CHILDREN” organisation in Nigeria in Abuja on Sunday.

DJ Cuppy pledges N5.1b to fight scourge

With an estimated 162,000 children that reportedly died of pneumonia in Nigeria in 2018, the country has been said to have the highest number of pneumonia deaths globally.

But Save the Children Ambassador, Cuppy Otedola (a.k.a. DJ Cuppy), has promised that the over N5.1 billion raised recently at a gala night would be given to Save the Children to tackle malnutrition and pneumonia in the country. The founder of Cuppy Foundation urged Nigerians to help in tackling the epidemic as well as provide clean water and reduce air pollution.

A new report by Save the Children revealed that globally, 802,000 children under the age of five died from pneumonia in 2018 and five of the countries are responsible for more than half of the deaths. Nigeria accounts for 162,000 deaths, India 127,000, Pakistan 58,000, Democratic of Congo 40,000 and Ethiopia 32,000 deaths.

Chief Executive Officer, Save the Children, Kevin Watkins, who spoke at a news conference to mark the World Pneumonia Day yesterday in Abuja, lamented that pneumonia is the world’s leading infectious killer of children under the age five, yet not so much attention is paid to the killer disease even though it could be prevented through vaccination.

Watkins said that the data got from the United Nations (UN) Inter-agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation 2019 and Save the Children’s Child Inequality Tracker lamented that the disease is a forgotten global health epidemic that demands a greater international response; millions of children are dying for want of vaccines, affordable antibiotics and routine oxygen treatment.

He said that recent analysis found out that Nigerian children born in poorest households were nearly three times more likely to die from diseases like pneumonia before their fifth birthday compared to the children born in rich households, adding that pneumonia crisis is a symptom of neglect and indefensible inequalities in access to healthcare.

He, therefore, stressed that investment in the health sector was very critical as the current three percent budget allocation was not enough to tackle the menace. He said that more than 40 percent of one-year-old children in Nigeria were unvaccinated and three in four children suffering from pneumonia symptoms do not get access to medical treatment, saying that there was need to ensure that vaccines get to the poorest of the poor to curb the disease.

Also, Chief of Party, Inspiring Project, Save the Children, Nigeria, Dr. Adamu Isah, said that children suffering from malnutrition or those that have their immune systems weakened by other infections and those living in air polluted areas were prune to the disease.Isah said that the organisation supported the Federal Ministry of Health to produce a roadmap to help in combating the disease.He, therefore, urged healthcare givers to pay attention to the symptoms of pneumonia to be able to detect it early enough to combat it.

In this article

0 Comments