Save the Children's State of the World's Mothers Report Ranks Best and Worst Places to Be a Mom
Afghanistan Ranks Worst, Norway Ranks Best, U.S. Drops Three Slots
WESTPORT, Conn., May 3, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- This Mother's Day, what moms have to celebrate varies dramatically depending on where they live, according to Save the Children's 2011 State of the World's Mothers report, which ranks 164 countries on women's access to health care, education and opportunities.
To view the multimedia assets associated with this release, please click: http://multivu.prnewswire.com/mnr/adcouncil/49959/
Norway is the world's best place to be a mother, and eight of the 10 top-ranked countries are in Western Europe. The remaining two are in the southern hemisphere, with Australia ranking second and New Zealand eighth. This year, the United States ranks 31st of 44 developed countries, dropping three spots from last year's rankings.
Meanwhile, eight of the world's 10 worst countries to be a mother are in Sub-Saharan Africa.
The world's toughest place to be a mother is Afghanistan, where two of every five children are malnourished and one in five will die before their fifth birthday. Afghan women have less than five years of schooling on average, and female life expectancy is only 45. Compare that to Norway, where one in 333 children die before age five and women typically complete 18 years of school and live to age 83.
"In many countries, access to basic vaccines, antibiotics, and care during pregnancy is very limited and as a result child and maternal death rates are very high," said Mary Beth Powers, chief of Save the Children's newborn and child survival campaign. "This Mother's Day, world leaders should honor mothers everywhere by ensuring they can celebrate what they want most -- healthy children. That means helping all families, moms and babies be within reach of a trained health worker."
In an effort to improve the care for mothers in the developing world, Save the Children and the Ad Council launched a national PSA campaign last May. The campaign aims to show Americans that they can have a significant impact on saving and improving the lives of at-risk children by supporting the training of local health workers in underserved communities. These frontline workers promote health practices like immunization and breastfeeding and treat children who are seriously ill. The campaign's interactive website, www.GoodGoes.org, provides visitors with opportunities to take action and to "See where the good goes" through the eyes of health workers sharing on-the-job challenges in five countries.
The full 2011 State of the World's Mothers Report, titled "Champions for Children: Why Investing in Maternal and Child Health in Developing Countries is Good for America" can be downloaded at www.savethechildren.org. It includes the rankings and essays from former Senators Bill Frist and John Corzine, best-selling authors Rick and Kay Warren, former Xerox Chair Anne Mulcahy and actress Jennifer Garner.
To take a deeper look into the lives of the world’s mothers, Save the Children has partnered with independent non-profit broadcaster, Link TV, on a new half-hour documentary that draws from the State of the World’s Mothers Report. ViewChange: The Mothers Index is available at www.ViewChange.org, and will be broadcasted on Link TV on Friday, May 6th (7pm ET, 4pm PT) and on Tuesday, May 10th (11pm ET, 8pm PT). Link TV is available nationally on DIRECTV channel 375 and DISH channel 9410.
Visit GoodGoes.org for information about Save the Children's newborn and child survival campaign.
Save the Children is the leading, independent organization that creates lasting change for children in need in the United States and 120 countries around the world.
The Ad Council (www.adcouncil.org) is a private, non-profit organization that marshals talent from the advertising and communications industries, the facilities of the media, and the resources of the business and non-profit communities to produce, distribute and promote public service campaigns on behalf of non-profit organizations and government agencies. The Ad Council addresses issue areas such as improving the quality of life for children, preventive health, education, community well-being, environmental preservation and strengthening families.
SOURCE Save the Children
WANT YOUR COMPANY'S NEWS FEATURED ON PRNEWSWIRE.COM?
Newsrooms &
Influencers
Digital Media
Outlets
Journalists
Opted In
Share this article