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Medicine at the Extremes of Life

Suffer the Little Children: The Gradual Improvement in Child Health has Left Newborns Behind. Childhood globally, and in Britain, is now safer than at any time in recorded history, with childhood deaths falling rapidly almost everywhere. Neonatal deaths (those in the first 28 days after birth) have fallen, but much more slowly than in later childhood.

Worldwide, we are approaching a point where almost half of all deaths in children under 5 occur in the first 28 days (neonates), and most of these are in the first week of life. In the UK, most of those who die by the age of 20, do so in the first year, and the highest risk is on the day of birth.

This lecture will briefly outline the reasons for the fall in child deaths, and then examine in more detail what we can do to reduce neonatal mortality globally, including low income countries and higher income ones such as in the UK. (from gresham.ac.uk)

3. Suffer the Little Children: The Gradual Improvement in Child Health has Left Newborns Behind


Go to the Series Home or watch other lectures:

1. Health and the Seven Ages of Man: Serious Ill Health in the Very Old and the Very Young
2. The Shape of Things to Come: Future Demography around the World
3. Suffer the Little Children: The Gradual Improvement in Child Health has Left Newborns Behind
4. Keeping the Heart Young in an Old Body
5. Stroke in the Elderly: Slowly Retreating
6. Dementia: At Risk of Being Forgotten?