14 June 2010
By Prithvjit Mitra
Kolkata, India

Pneumonia and diarrhoea prove fatal when they strike children below the age of two. Those between one and oneand–half are considered the most vulnerable. “This year has been particularly bad in Kolkata. Hundreds of children in the age group have been afflicted with the diseases. The most common trigger was low nutrition, which, surprisingly was found to be the cause for the diseases among children of affluent parents as well. Antibiotic resistance has further complicated the situation and was responsible for deaths in many cases,”said Debashish Basu, preventive medicine specialist. Pneumonia vaccines are not fool–proof and have a success rate of about 80%.
The WHO study, published in the medical journal The Lancet, was done by researchers at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore for the World Health Organization and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
Of the 8.795 million child deaths in 2008, 68%, or 5.97 million, were caused by infectious illness, the study reported. Pneumonia (18 %), diarrhoea (15%) and malaria (8%) were the biggest killers.
Almost half of the child deaths worldwide occurred in only five countries: China, Nigeria, India, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Pakistan. At least 41% (3.6 million) of the deaths occurred in the first 27 days after birth.
Experts are now compiling data and planning a study on the reasons that could have led to the spurt. “Lack of proper nutrition seems to be the trigger among affluent children. A preliminary screening shows that a many are gaining weight very slowly, reducing their resistance levels and eventually making them fall prey to the diseases. It’ll be interesting to know why this nutrition deficiency is happening,”said Ray.
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