UCL Global Health Symposium Fatal Neglect: Forgotten issues in child health
The UCL Institute for Global Health's 10th Symposium, 'Fatal Neglect: Forgotten issues in child health' was held on 10 June 2009, in collaboration with Save the Children UK, Tearfund, 'The Lancet', Water Aid and World Vision. Rhona MacDonald, Senior Editor at 'The Lancet', began by highlighting that there are 10 million child deaths every year and asked, 'How is this acceptable?' Lack of access to clean water and improved sanitation is responsible for a large proportion of these child deaths, yet these key challenges continue to be neglected in the global health agenda, despite being included in Millennium Development Goals agreed by all the world's countries and leading development institutions. She challenged the audience to take action in prioritising water, sanitation and hygiene interventions - where every $1 invested in water and sanitation generates a $8 return ' emphasising that, in this issue, 'Complacency is complicity.' Symposium panel member David Mepham (Director of Policy, Save the Children UK) felt that Save the Children hadn't focused on water, sanitation and hygiene interventions as much as it should, but in the next three to five years it is planning a focus on child survival which will include examining the economic, social and environmental determinants of health. Mikael Ostergren (Department for Child & Adolescent Health & Development, World Health Organization) called for as much money to be spent on water, sanitation and hygiene as on HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria.
