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Maternal & Child Health

  Every child deserves a 5th Birthday
  This year, more than 7 million children will die before they turn 5. Learn about USAID's new 5th Birthday campaign to end preventable child deaths.

Building a Brighter Future

USAID is committed to improving the health and well-being of children and families in the developing world.

For 40 years, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has helped children throughout the world grow into healthy, productive adults. Progress in child survival and disease control has long been, and remains, among the Agency’s major accomplishments. USAID-funded interventions – oral rehydration therapy (ORT) and zinc supplementation to treat diarrhea; basic immunizations for common ailments; micronutrient supplementation to treat malnutrition; and more – save the lives of approximately 6 million children under 5 each year. USAID assistance is also instrumental in other areas of child and maternal health, such as the fight against HIV/AIDS and other infectious diseases.

A mother’s health profoundly affects the health and well-being of her children. While maternal mortality remains unacceptably high throughout the developing world, a number of USAID-assisted countries have achieved significant reductions in maternal deaths from pregnancy-related causes. USAID’s approach to improving maternal health and the health of newborn children includes community involvement, evidence-based interventions (interventions that, after rigorous testing, have documented proof of their effectiveness), and compassionate high-quality services. Key interventions such as iron supplementation, malaria treatment, safe and clean delivery, and treatment of obstetric and newborn complications are improving the health outcomes for mothers and infants around the world.

Download the full report Two Decades of Progress: USAID’s Child Survival and Maternal Health Program [PDF, 3.9MB]


USAID's Maternal & Child Health Programs


Photo of a mother holding her child, taken in Senegal.
Source: USAID/Senegal
Health Research Program (HaRP)

Through collaborating partners, USAID's Health Research Program (HaRP) identifies the challenges for maternal and child health in developing countries and countries in transition, and designs the most effective approach to overcome them. These challenges range from infectious diseases to malnutrition to health services delivery by community health workers.

 





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