Africa: Climate Change - an Urgent Threat to Pregnant Women and Children

21 November 2023

The document is titled Protecting maternal, newborn and child health from the impacts of climate change.

Pregnant women, babies and children face extreme health risks from climate catastrophes, a new report on Tuesday has said.

According to a Call for Action statement released by the United Nations (UN) agencies, the situation warrants urgent attention ahead of the global Conference of the Parties (COP28) negotiations on climate change in Dubai.

The document is titled Protecting maternal, newborn and child health from the impacts of climate change.

According to the document shared with PREMIUM TIMES, the effects of climate events on maternal and child health "have been neglected, underreported and underestimated".

The report highlights that few countries' climate change response plans mention maternal or child health.

Glaring omission

The report describes this as "a glaring omission and emblematic of the inadequate attention to the needs of women, newborns, and children in the climate change discourse".

"Climate change poses an existential threat to all of us, but pregnant women, babies and children face some of the gravest consequences of all," Bruce Aylward, Assistant Director General for Universal Health Coverage, Life Course at the World Health Organization (WHO) was quoted in the statement.

"Children's futures need to be consciously protected, which means taking climate action now for the sake of their health and survival, while ensuring their unique needs are recognised in the climate response."

Background

A series of devastating climate disasters have marked 2023.

Wildfires, floods, heatwaves and droughts are displacing people, killing crops and livestock, and worsening air pollution. An over-heating world is increasing the spread of deadly diseases like cholera, malaria and dengue, with dire consequences for pregnant women and children for whom these infections can be especially severe details the report.

Research shows that harm can begin even in the womb, leading to pregnancy-related complications, preterm birth, low birthweight and stillbirth. For children, consequences can last a lifetime, affecting the development of their bodies and brains as they grow says the report.

"Action on climate change often ignores that children's bodies and minds are uniquely vulnerable to pollution, deadly diseases and extreme weather," UNICEF Deputy Executive Director for Programmes, Omar Abdi, was quoted in the release.

"We do this at our peril. The climate crisis is jeopardizing every child's fundamental right to health and well-being. It is our collective responsibility to listen and put children at the centre of urgent climate action, beginning at COP28. This is the moment to finally put children on the climate change agenda."

An excerpt of the release is reproduced below:

The Call to Action highlights seven urgent actions to address these mounting risks. These include sustained reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and action on climate finance, alongside the specific inclusion of the needs of pregnant women, babies and children within climate and disaster-related policies. The agencies also call for more research to better understand the impacts of climate change on maternal and child health.

"To find climate solutions that acknowledge the distinct health needs and vulnerabilities of women and girls we must start by asking the right questions," said Diene Keita, the Deputy Executive Director for Programmes at UNFPA, the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency. "Global climate solutions must support - not sacrifice - gender equality."

The Call to Action was released by WHO, UNICEF and UNFPA at an online launch event, alongside an advocacy brief by the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (PMNCH). The PMNCH advocacy brief reinforces the Call to Action by outlining specific recommendations for different stakeholders - including governments, global financing mechanisms, donors and foundations, private sector and civil society - for ensuring that the health needs of women, children and adolescents are better addressed in climate policies, financing, and programmes.

"Climate change is a major intergenerational injustice of our times. Safeguarding the health and rights of women, children, and adolescents is non-negotiable in the face of the climate crisis", said Rt Hon Helen Clark, PMNCH Board Chair and former Prime Minister of New Zealand. "Every stakeholder, from governments to the private sector and civil society, including health care professionals, holds a critical role in championing policies and actions which protect the most vulnerable. The urgency to integrate women, children and adolescent health needs into climate responses is not just a moral imperative, but an effective strategy with long-term benefits for resilient and healthy societies".

During the COP28 meetings, delegates will mark the first-ever Day of Health, noting the intractable linkages between the health of people and the planet.

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