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      Global Report

      Levels & Trends in Child Mortality - 2025 Report

      This year’s report calls for renewed commitment, targeted investments, and accelerated action to ensure that every child, everywhere, survives and thrives.

      Levels and Trends Image

      Levels & Trends in Child Mortality - 2025 Report

      In 2024, the world lost an estimated 4.9 million children before their fifth birthday, alongside 2.1 million deaths among older children, adolescents and youth. Despite decades of progress, the pace of mortality reduction is slowing, and in some places stalling, with the heaviest burdens falling on sub‑Saharan Africa and Southern Asia.

      For the first time, the United Nations Inter‑agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation (UN IGME) has produced fully synchronized cause‑of‑death estimates, showing what children are dying from at different ages. This offers the strongest evidence yet on where urgent action is needed most, and which life‑saving interventions will have the greatest impact.

      This year’s combined release of UN IGME’s all‑cause mortality estimates and the CA CODE group’s cause‑specific estimates provides the most comprehensive evidence base to date. Yet, major data gaps persist, particularly in the highest‑burden countries. Closing these gaps is critical to targeting interventions effectively and accelerating progress toward ending preventable child deaths everywhere.

      The tools to end these deaths already exist, but they must be deployed at far greater scale and speed. As conflict, climate shocks, fragile health systems and funding pressures intensify, the window to protect millions of young lives is narrowing.

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      Global Report Date:

      March 29, 2026

      Region:

      Africa, Global

      Topics:

      Child Mortality Data
      Child Death Review
      Data Collection
      Prevention Strategies
      Intervention Strategies
      Levels & Trends in Child Mortality - 2025 Report

      Research Objectives:

      Understanding what children are dying from
      Where a child grows up still shapes their chance of survival
      Huge disparities in the level of neonatal mortality persist across regions and countries
      The highest national under-five mortality rates are found in sub-Saharan Africa
      Hard‑won progress to reduce child mortality must be sustained
      Both the under-five mortality rate and the number of under-five deaths have fallen by over 60% since 1990

      Authored By:

      IGME
      UNICEF 2
      WHO Logo (002)
      World Bank
      United NATIONS

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