Ensure strong health and well-being - the health of all people of all ages.
To achieve the goals of economic transformation, it is important to ensure a healthy and prosperous life.
In any case, in many places, they are facing the realities of real well-being, for example, high rates of maternal and infant mortality, the spread of preventable and incurable diseases, and poor health recovery. Throughout the last several years, significant progress has been made in increasing the future and reducing the common causes of death related to infant and maternal mortality, however, in order to achieve this goal, which states that by 2030 there will be fewer than 70 deaths, appropriate. working with appropriate professional help. Also, achieving the goal of reducing the unexpected loss of non-communicable diseases by a third by 2030 will require the use of better development of clean cooking oil and risk training. cigarettes.
More and more efforts are expected to eradicate the scourge of disease and address many of the ever-changing and ongoing health problems. If we focus on providing strong support for health systems, improving hygiene and disinfection, increasing admission to clinical benefits, and providing additional advice on how best to reduce pollution, we will reap many benefits. helping to save the lives of millions of people.
The power of the child
Increasingly, less than 17,000 children kick the bucket more than in 1990, yet more than 5,000,000 children are biting the dust every year now before their fifth birthday.
Since the year 2000, measles has killed an estimated 15.6 million people.
Despite global developments, the under-five mortality rate remains high in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. The deaths of four out of five children under the age of five occur in these areas.
Poor pregnant women are twice as likely to bite the dust before five years than children from the most luxurious families.
The offspring of trained mothers, even mothers with special training, will certainly be able to outgrow the offspring of inexperienced mothers.
mother's health
Maternal mortality has dropped by 37% since 2000.
In East Asia, North Africa, and South Asia, maternal mortality has reached 66%.
In any case, maternal mortality - the rate of mothers who do not tolerate cutting compared to people kicking buckets - in creating districts is many times higher than in natural areas.
Many women receive prenatal care. In creating regions, maternity care has grown from 65% in 1990 to 83% in 2012.
Only 50% of women in regional creation receive the recommended level of medical services they need.
In many industrial areas, the youth is small, yet these improvements have slowed down. The dramatic increase in prophylactic use in the 1990s is not the same as in the 2000s.
The need for family planning is gradually being met by more women, as the need continues to grow rapidly.
HIV / AIDS, intestinal infections, and various diseases
In 2017, 36.9 million people were living with HIV.
21.7 million received antiretroviral treatment in 2017.
An estimated 1.8 million people were infected with HIV in 2017.
A total of 940,000 died from AIDS-related illnesses in 2017.
77.3 million people have been infected with HIV since the outbreak began.
A total of 35.4 million people have died of AIDS-related illnesses since the outbreak began.
Tuberculosis remains a well-known cause of death for people living with HIV, representing about one-third of those who die from AIDS.
All over the world, young women and young women face a wide range of traits, rejection, segregation, and cruelty, which puts them at the top of their HIV line.
HIV is the leading cause of death among women of childbearing age worldwide.
Aid is currently the leading cause of death among young people (10-19 years) in Africa and is the second most common cause of death among young people worldwide.
Somewhere between 2000 and 2015, a staggering 6.2 million deaths due to jungle fever were reported.
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