Global Health

World Pneumonia Day 2009: Join The Fight

Published November 02, 2009 @ 06:06AM PT

Pneumonia is preventable and treatable; so why does a child die from pneumonia every 15 seconds? Today is the first World Pneumonia Day, and Save the Children is taking action to protect children from a disease that takes nearly 2 million lives each year – that is one child every 15 seconds. Every day in 40 countries around the world we work with parents and community health workers to provide these children with the medicine and expertise to help children survive pneumonia.

Why all the effort around the first World Pneumonia Day? It's not just the toll that pneumonia takes on children that has created an organized movement to combat this life-threatening infection. It's the fact that affordable, effective treatments exist but children in developing countries are not getting them. This is both heartbreaking and frustrating.

Many low-income countries have developed effective health strategies for protecting children from pneumonia and other childhood illnesses. Where hospitals and health clinics are beyond the reach of families, community health workers are trained to diagnose and treat pneumonia and other childhood illnesses in their own communities.

Consider 1-year old Marta who lives with her family in a Mayan community in the highlands of Guatemala. She came down with pneumonia when she was 7 months old. Her grandfather took her to the community health worker, Juan Lux, who quickly diagnosed Marta with pneumonia and gave her a dose of antibiotics. But Marta was still not out of danger and Juan referred her to the nearest hospital -- an hour-long walk over the mountains to catch a bus for the 19-mile trip to the hospital. (And on those treacherous mountain roads, 19 miles is a long, long trip!) Marta was hospitalized, treated with antibiotics and is now doing fine.

Marta is one of the lucky ones: Lucky because her grandfather sought help quickly. And luckier still because Save the Children had trained and equipped Juan Lux to provide health care for children in their little village. Without his correct diagnosis, proper treatment and referral, Marta might not have survived.

Now we are asking you to join this fight by going to www.missionpneumonia.org and getting the facts about childhood pneumonia. Should you accept your mission, this site will provide you with opportunities to make a real world difference by:

  • Recruiting friends, family and colleagues to play www.missionpneumonia.org by sharing on Facebook, Twitter and email with different facts about pneumonia and the obstacles family and community health workers face
  • Signing our petition to Congress on the Newborn, Child and Mother Survival Act. Show your elected officials that you support expanding the reach of life-saving tools – vaccines, antibiotics and trained health workers – to more mothers and babies in poor countries.
  • Helping to provide the supplies and training Community Health Workers around the world need to help diagnose and fight pneumonia.

Our mission doesn't end with World Pneumonia Day, but it can make a strong step in the right direction. Even as I sit at my computer writing this blog post, I know that health workers like Juan Lux are making rounds in remote villages, checking the progress of sick children and following up with their parents. This makes me hopeful that we can save millions more lives by making affordable health measures to the poorest children and by bringing health care closer to children's homes.

Privacy Policy Legal Disclosure Terms of Use

© 2009 Save the Children | 1-800-728-3843 | 54 Wilton Road, Westport, CT 06880

Share this Post

Comments (2)

  1. Sam Rabinowitz

    To commemorate the World Pneumonia Day, GiveVaccines.org has created a special category with regards to pneumonia.  For this category, and each of the other categories, you will find 10 levels of difficulty. GiveVaccines.org will automatically adjust to words of varying levels of difficulty based on your performance.  So, challenge yourself and your friends to see what level you can achieve.

     

    Go to  http://globalhealth.change.org/actions/view/go_to_givevaccinesorg_-_play_the_free_vocab_game_raise_fun_2

    and make the pledge to visit GiveVaccines.org and help join the cause! 

     

    Posted by Sam Rabinowitz on 11/02/2009 @ 10:00AM PT

  2. PATH

    Today, PATH joins fellow Global Coalition for Childhood Pneumonia members and communities worldwide to commemorate World Pneumonia Day. Two million children under the age of five die each year from pneumonia, mostly in the developing world. World Pneumonia Day is a reminder that children in low-income countries need our help everyday to access vaccines and treatment. Thank you for helping bring more attention to this issue.

    http://www.path.org/news/an091102-pneumonia.php

    Posted by PATH on 11/02/2009 @ 10:31AM PT

Add a Comment

For your comment to be published, you will need to confirm your email address after submitting your comment.

If you already have an account, click here to log in.

Comments on Change.org are meant for further exploration and evaluation of the ideas covered in the posts. To that end, we welcome constructive comments. However, we reserve the right to delete comments that are offensive, abusive, or off-topic; that contain ad hominem attacks; or that are designed to subvert or hijack comment threads rather than contribute to them. Repeat offenders may be permanently removed from the site at our discretion.

Author

Mary Beth Powers, Campaign Chief for Survive to 5 Campaign, has worked for nearly 20 years to support child and maternal health programs around the world. In her current role, Mary Beth is leading Save the Children’s new global initiative called Survive to 5, which seeks to reduce the staggering number of child deaths – currently estimated at nearly 9 million per year. She has an undergraduate degree in international politics from Georgetown University and a master’s in public health from the University of Michigan. She has lived and worked in Egypt, Pakistan and Thailand.

close

This user's Profile page is not public. They have restricted it to only their friends.

Already a Member?

Create an Account

You must create a Change.org account to complete this action.
If you already have an account click here.