News Release

$32.1 billion to help women, newborns, young children and adolescents

Massive global effort to restore 40 percent loss of health services due to COVID-19

Grant and Award Announcement

Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child Health (PMNCH)

Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child Health

image: PMNCH is a global alliance of 1,200 partner organizations, hosted at the World Health Organization. www.pmnch.org view more 

Credit: PMNCH

A massive $32.1 billion of funding to help women, newborns, children and adolescents has been pledged to restore essential health, nutrition and social services for women, newborns, children and adolescents lost because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The pledges are highlighted as part of an expanding campaign coordinated by The Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child Health (PMNCH), based on a global Call to Action to protect women, children and adolescents in the COVID-19 crisis and beyond.

“Three decades of massive improvement in health and social services for this group is severely threatened,” says Helen Clark, former Prime Minister of New Zealand and Chair of PMNCH, a global alliance of 1,200 partner organizations, hosted at the World Health Organization (WHO).

Women, newborns, children and adolescents have experienced disruptions of almost 40 percent of key health services since the pandemic, according to the WHO. 

Of the $32.1 billion total pledged to date, almost 60 percent or $18.9 billion in domestic funding is being committed by low and middle-income countries in response to PMNCH’s Call to Action, including Burkina Faso, India, Kenya, Liberia, Malawi, Nigeria, South Africa and Zambia. The remaining $13.2 billion is from official development assistance committed as grants from high income countries and a private foundation, announced in December 2020.

“The majority of the pledges are domestic funding coming from middle and low-income countries themselves, with almost $17 billion from African nations,” says Helen Clark. “These nations are acting and not waiting for donations from others to help women, children and adolescents in their countries.” 

Of this $32.1 billion, $15.2 billion (47 percent) is money to address COVID-19. The other half is directed to protecting existing sexual, reproductive, maternal, newborn, child & adolescent health budgets, and protecting women, children and adolescents from violence.

“These funds will support women, children and adolescents in getting health services and priority social protections throughout the COVID-19 crisis and recovery periods,” says Joy Phumaphi, Executive Secretary of the African Leaders Malaria Alliance and a leader in the PMNCH network.

The two most frequently disrupted services are: 

  • In January to March 2021, more than a year after the COVID-19 pandemic first prompted lockdowns, 44 percent of 121 countries reported disruptions to family planning and contraception services. 
  • During the same time period, 41 percent of countries reported disruptions to services for management of moderate and severe malnutrition. 

“The health of women, children, and adolescents is now at great risk, with pre-existing inequities compounded by narrowing access to essential health services,” Helen Clark said. “Our concern is that resources directed to them, which were already insufficient, are being diverted away to respond to other challenges exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Basic primary health care matters immensely in saving lives and protecting rights.”

The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on women, newborns, children and adolescents 

• Maternal Deaths. Severe disruptions to essential services due to COVID-19 have been estimated to result in almost 1 million additional child and maternal deaths between May 2020-April 2021. 

• Child Health. In 2020, because of the secondary effects of the pandemic, the number of children that have not received a single vaccine shot against preventable diseases, including diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (so-called “zero-dose” children), has gone up by 30 percent in the least developed countries, leaving them vulnerable to some of the world’s deadliest diseases.

• COVID-19 cases. More than 14 million children and adolescents have contracted COVID-19 in 104 countries. That is more than 14 percent of the 102 million infections globally. Infection patterns have shifted towards younger age groups due to rising vaccine coverage among adults.

• COVID-19 vaccinations. As of October 2021, only 1 in 27 people in low-income countries, or less than 4 percent, has been vaccinated with at least one dose. More than 6.2 billion doses have been administered globally, but only 3 percent of those in Africa have been fully vaccinated. 

• Stillbirths. Almost 200,000 additional stillbirths are estimated to have occurred between October 2020 and September 2021 due to the impact of the pandemic. It is estimated that the chances of a stillbirth increased by almost 30 percent in low and middle-income countries, compared to pre-pandemic level. 

• Unwanted pregnancies. An analysis of unwanted pregnancy in 115 low and middle-income countries found as many as 1.4 million unintended pregnancies may have occurred before women were able to resume use of family planning services. 

• Violence against women. Violence against women and children during COVID-19 has increased. For example, domestic violence hotlines in some countries reported a five-fold increase in calls after physical distancing and lockdown measures were introduced. 

• Orphans and caregivers. COVID-19 has created at least 1.5 million orphans, out of four million deaths worldwide, according to a study published in The Lancet. A person under 18 loses a caregiver every 12 seconds. For every two COVID-19 deaths worldwide, one child is left behind to face the death of a parent or caregiver.

“The pandemic exposed critical weaknesses in our health systems. Battling the COVID-19 pandemic has shown us how much basic primary health care matters in saving lives and protecting the rights of women and children,” says Githinji Gitahi, Global CEO of Amref Health Africa and a leader in the PMNCH network. “We need to achieve universal health coverage to ensure that women, children and adolescents are protected at the primary level.” 

Health systems worldwide were ill-prepared to cope with the scale of the pandemic and to mitigate the disruption to essential sexual, reproductive, maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health services. In addition, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic extends far beyond the health sector. Women, children and adolescents are also among the most vulnerable and impacted by the critical socio-economic consequences of the pandemic, exacerbating poverty, marginalization and inequities. 

Economic impact 

The pandemic has triggered a recession surpassing any economic downturn since World War II, leading to potential long-lasting economic consequences and historic levels of unemployment and deprivation. It is proving to be a human crisis whose impact on women, and girls is being felt in all areas, from health, economy, security to social protection –and are exacerbated simply by virtue of their gender. 

For example, the decrease in employment between 2019 and 2020 was more pronounced than during the Great Recession of 2008-2009 for both women and men. However, women have been disproportionately hit by job-losses. Women lost 4.2 percent of jobs as a result of the pandemic, compared to 3 percent of men’s employment. 

If no action is taken to counter the gendered effects of the pandemic on women’s jobs, the global GDP growth is estimated to be $1 trillion lower in 2030 than it would be if women’s unemployment simply tracked that of men. The current crisis undermines decades of gains made on gender equality and women’s equal participation in the labour force. The health and well-being of women, children and adolescents – directly influenced by household income – is further compromised in this process.

PMNCH has issued a 7-point Call to Action (see below) in response to the devastating effects of COVID-19 on the health and well-being of women, children and adolescents. It calls on leaders to protect and prioritize their rights and health during the COVID-19 response and recovery by strengthening political commitment, policies and financing for vital health services and social protections, particularly for the most vulnerable. 

Countries have responded to this call with these financial and policy commitments to prevent the COVID-19 pandemic from becoming a lasting crisis.

By the beginning of December 2020, the Call to Action had brought together commitments of $20.6 billion. As of October 2021, the pledges have increased by almost 56 percent to $32.1 billion.

$32.1 billion in funding to help women, newborns, children and adolescents

Country pledges are directed to these areas: maternal, newborn, child, and adolescent health care and well-being, health systems strengthening, nutrition, food security and social protection programs and sexual and reproductive health and rights.

Here are some individual pledges from low- and middle-income countries (full text of all commitments, including donor pledges, is available at: www.pmnch.org):

Burkina Faso – $263 million annually for the period of 2021-2025 for free health care for women and children under five, and for family planning services. Burkina Faso also commits to improving equity and strengthening primary healthcare systems, including healthcare workforces and to providing quality sexual and reproductive health services adapted to the needs of adolescents and young people by 2025. 

Costa Rica commits to extending social protection by providing vouchers to more than 700,000 people affected by layoffs or reductions in employment due the pandemic, 74 percent of which were provided to women heads of households. Costa Rica enacted a legal prohibition on reducing hours or suspending work for pregnant or breastfeeding women, and committed to provide comprehensive medical care to women, children, adolescents, migrants and the uninsured in the context of the COVID-19 health crisis. In addition, Costa Rica has strengthened an inter-institutional mechanism to ensure women's continued access to services addressing gender-based violence. 

India – $2 billion during 2020-2021 to strengthen all levels of care in response to the pandemic and to ensure essential public health functions with an enhanced focus on women, children and adolescents and the most vulnerable.

Kenya – $2.2 billion during 2021-2022 for the provision of universal health coverage to guarantee quality and affordable healthcare, with additional funding committed under the post COVID-19 Economic Recovery Strategy for inequality, social cohesion and social protection.

Liberia – $10.6 million in 2021 to improve the health and well-being of women, children and adolescents, by supporting and building the capacity of health services providers, providing safe and accessible drinking water, sanitation and hygiene as part of the COVID-19 incidence management system, and guaranteeing availability of critical life-saving equipment and medicines to ensure access to quality health care to women, children and adolescents.

Malawi – $213.7 million during 2020-2021 is committed to prioritize women’s, children’s and adolescent’s health, including strengthening sexual and reproductive health and rights by finalizing its relevant national strategies; expanding the health workforce by recruiting an additional 1,380 health workers to provide primary care to women, children and adolescents by the end of 2021; ensuring that nurses and midwives have the knowledge, skills and equipment necessary to deliver quality, respectful and dignified care by 2023; and conducting assessments to determine staff recruitment needs in district health facilities by 2023.

Mexico commits to increase budget allocation to its states for the implementation of safe abortion services, emphasizing the use of resources and technologies based on global recommendations, and design and implement a national strategy that combines inter-institutional and intersectoral actions to accelerate the reduction of maternal mortality, in the context of during and after the COVD-19 pandemic. 

Nigeria – $2.3 billion during 2020-2028 for strategic interventions that protect the reproductive, maternal, newborn, child, adolescent and elderly health and nutrition through access to family planning services, immunization, and nutrition programmes.

Panama commits to focus on equity and primary care approaches to protect and improve the health of women, children and adolescents. In March 2021, the government also signed into law new legislation that criminalizes political violence and harassment against women, including actions that limit women's access to elected positions. The government commits to work collectively with civil society, the United Nations, health professionals, adolescents and youth, donor organizations, and the private sector to provide quality, respectful and dignified care, and mechanisms for community engagement and redress.

Paraguay commits to promote strategies to reduce child morbidity and mortality, addressing health inequities and developing a model of comprehensive, adolescent-friendly health services to provide quality and free family planning and access to complete and accurate information. Paraguay also commits to advance social protection with a focus on women, children and adolescents, people with disabilities, indigenous people, those living in poverty and children and adolescents without parental care during COVID-19.

South Africa – $11.4 billion is committed during 2021-2023 to address violence against women, raise the awareness of young people on Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights and enable their productive economic participation towards achieving gender equality. South Africa also commits to reviewing national COVID-19 policies for adolescents and youth sexual and reproductive health to ensure adequacy and responsiveness of programmes, and to accelerating the COVID-19 vaccination program. 

Zambia – $459.6 million is committed to investing in the health sector including in essential medicines and commodities in 2020-2021, with targeted investments prioritizing the health of women, children and adolescents. Zambia commits to ensuring that mothers and babies, irrespective of their social, financial status or physical disability, continue to have the highest quality of care, and sustaining provision of essential sexual, reproductive, maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health services as a key pillar of its multisectoral response to COVID-19. 

Zimbabwe commits to a 60 percent increase in domestic financing for its reproductive, maternal, newborn, child, adolescent health and nutrition program by 2022, including updating national policies, guidelines and strategies on the continuity of essential reproductive, maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health in the context of the pandemic to reduce inequalities among pregnant and lactating women in accessing services and empowering health providers to respond to pandemic. The government has committed to accelerate implementation of the COVID-19 vaccination programme to reach 60 percent of the population by 2021.

* * *

PMNCH Call to Action

Throughout the Covid-19 response and recovery, we urge governments to protect and promote the health and rights of women, children and adolescents through strengthened political commitment, policies and domestic resource mobilization and financing, supported by Official Development Assistance, for:

  1. Sexual, reproductive, maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health (SRMNCAH) services, supplies, and information and demand generation including for contraception, safe abortion, immunization, safe delivery, stillbirth prevention, and mental health;
  2. Advancing sexual and reproductive rights and gender equality;
  3. Quality care, including respectful and dignified care, and effective community engagement and redress mechanisms;
  4. Recruitment, training, equal and fair pay, and safe working conditions, including protective personal equipment, for frontline health workers, notably midwives and nurses;
  5. Social protections, including food and nutrition security, for marginalized and vulnerable groups and enhanced data to better understand and address disparities experienced by adolescents, refugees, the internally displaced, migrants, indigenous communities, persons living with disabilities, among others;
  6. Functional, safe, and clean toilet and hand washing facilities and quality potable drinking water, with a particular focus on healthcare centers, schools, and centers for refugees and internally displaced persons; 
  7. Prevention of violence against women, children and adolescents through education and protection programs.

www.pmnch.org


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