May 12, 2009
New reports highlight stalled progress against diarrheal disease
- Nearly 1.6 million children die each year from these preventable and treatable diseases
- Call to action demonstrates commitment to combating a leading killer of children worldwide
Washington,
DC — PATH and WaterAid America released two new reports today that
show that the international aid community and developing country
governments are not responding to clear evidence on child mortality by
targeting resources where the disease burden is greatest.

Toddlers play in an open sewage channel in a slum with no sanitation facilities, Bangladesh.
WaterAid / Juthika Howlader
Diarrheal
disease, a leading killer of children under age five worldwide, is
responsible for the deaths of nearly 1.6 million children annually, yet
it receives very little attention from both policy makers and the
public.
During the 1980s and 1990s, diarrheal disease mortality rates
were cut by nearly 50 percent, made possible by wide availability and
implementation of lifesaving prevention and treatment interventions.
The
international aid system and developing country governments need to
come together with a strong voice and respond to diarrheal disease, one
of the leading the causes of child mortality, in a targeted manner.
Today,
diarrhea receives significantly less funding than other diseases,
despite accounting for 17 percent of deaths of children under five. And
in some parts of the world, the severity of the disease is increasing.
Diarrheal Disease: Solutions to Defeat a Global Killer from PATH and
Fatal neglect: How health systems are failing to comprehensively address child mortalityfrom WaterAid America highlight the urgent need
to refocus attention on diarrhea, a prolific global killer.
At the same
time, a broad and diverse group of more than 75 organizations from many
sectors have signed a Call to Action on diarrheal disease,
demonstrating a unified show of support for aggressively meeting the
challenge diarrheal disease presents today.
“The global health
community knows what is necessary to save the lives of children
suffering from diarrhea,” said Dr. John Wecker, director of the
Immunization Solutions Program at PATH. “And now is the time to educate
policy makers, donors, and international and national leaders about the
need to implement the solutions to prevent and treat the most severe
causes.”
Key findings in the reports indicate:
- The
international aid system and developing country governments must
respond to evidence on child mortality – of which diarrheal disease is
a leading cause – and better target resources where the disease burden
is the greatest.
- Comprehensive health systems strengthening that
addresses environmental factors such as sanitation and water are
critical to improving overall health and reducing diarrheal disease
deaths. The Millennium Development Goal on child survival (MDG 4) will
remain beyond our reach until diarrheal disease and the poor sanitation
and unsafe drinking water that can lead to it are addressed.
- There
are more lifesaving prevention and treatment solutions for diarrheal
disease than any other major childhood illness. These interventions
include rotavirus vaccines, zinc treatment, oral rehydration therapy
(ORT)/oral rehydration solution (ORS), breastfeeding and optimal
complementary feeding, safe water, improved sanitation and hygiene.
- Millions of children’s lives could be saved by addressing diarrheal
disease with a coordinated approach among health care providers, policy
makers and the international aid community focusing on both prevention
and treatment interventions.
The report releases come at a
critical time when the World Health Organization (WHO) is reviewing
data from studies of vaccines to prevent rotavirus—the most common and
lethal diarrheal disease—from clinical trials in Africa and Asia. The
WHO will consider a global recommendation that every country introduce
rotavirus vaccines into its routine immunization schedule based on this
data.

Mothers with their children in a clinic in Ethiopia.
Kate Eshelby
“While diarrheal disease is a global killer, today the burden
is greatest in developing nations in Africa and Asia where access to
clean water, sanitation and urgent medical care may be limited,” said
Nancy C. Bwalya-Mukumbuta, program manager at WaterAid in Zambia. “The
international aid system and developing country governments need to
come together with a strong voice and respond to diarrheal disease, one
of the leading the causes of child mortality, in a targeted manner.”
The
Call to Action urges advocates, including organizations from the
health, development, environmental, water/sanitation, and research
communities, to push for adequate funding of both prevention and
treatment interventions for diarrheal disease.
These organizations,
such as the UN Foundation, Save the Children, WaterAid America, and
Earth Day Network, are also joining together to reaffirm their
commitment to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). World leaders
have committed to child survival and improving conditions for future
generations around the world by 2015 through the MDGs. But, today,
progress towards these goals is seriously off track.
If diarrheal
disease and the poor sanitation and unsafe water that can lead to it
continue to be ignored, the child survival MDG will be unobtainable.
“The persisting high mortality rate from diarrhea in the presence of
existing, cost-effective interventions and available resources to
implement them represents a continuing scandal,” said Olivier Fontaine,
Medical Officer, Department of Child and Adolescent Health and
Development at the WHO.
To access
Diarrheal Disease: Solutions to Defeat a Global Killer please visit:
http://www.eddcontrol.org/files/Solutions_to_Defeat_a_Global_Killer.pdfRead a summary and/or download Fatal neglect: How health systems are failing to comprehensively address child mortalityTo read the Call to Action and get involved, please visit:
http://www.eddcontrol.org/call-to-action.php PATHis an international nonprofit organization that creates sustainable,
culturally relevant solutions, enabling communities worldwide to break
longstanding cycles of poor health. By collaborating with diverse
public- and private-sector partners, PATH helps provide appropriate
health technologies and vital strategies that change the way people
think and act. PATH’s work improves global health and well-being.
WaterAidworks to overcome poverty by enabling the world’s poorest people to
gain access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene education. WaterAid
works in Africa, Asia and the Pacific region and campaigns globally
with partners to realize a vision of a world where everyone has access
to these basic human rights.
