Child Deaths: Unicef Says Global Mortality Rates Fall

The number of children dying before the age of five has fallen significantly over the past 20 years, the UN children's agency Unicef has said. Some 6.9 million children died before the age of five last year, compared to 12 million such deaths in 1990. Almost 19,000 under-fives died daily in 2011. Unicef said some of the reduction was due to poorer countries getting richer. But some was also due to well-targeted aid such as encouraging breastfeeding or immunising against common diseases. The sharpest drops in levels of child mortality were in countries that had received a lot of external assistance. "If you look at the countries that have achieved the best results - the Lao People's Democratic Republic, Timor Leste and Liberia - those are the top three - I think in all of those three aid has been a very important contributor," said Unicef's UK director, David Bull. Efforts to target infectious diseases such as measles have cut related deaths globally from 500,000 in 2000 to 100,000 in 2011,