A neglected tragedy: the global burden of stillbirths

Report of the UN Inter-agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation (IGME)

Overview

One stillbirth occurs every 16 seconds. This means that every year, about 2 million babies are stillborn. This loss reaches far beyond the loss of life. The psychological costs, such as maternal depression, are profound, not to mention the financial consequences for parents and long-term economic repercussions for society. Though the difficult impacts on families – and most especially on women – are severe and long lasting, stigma and taboo hide the hardship of stillbirths, even in high-income countries.

But this traumatic loss of life remains a neglected issue. Stillbirths are largely absent in worldwide data tracking, rendering the true extent of the problem hidden. They are invisible in policies and programmes

and underfinanced as an area requiring intervention. Targets specific to stillbirths were absent from the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and are still missing in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
WHO Team
Child Health and Development (CHD), Epidemiology, Monitoring and Evaluation UHL (EME), Maternal Health (MAH), Maternal, Newborn, Child & Adolescent Health & Ageing (MCA)
Editors
WHO, UNICEF, WORLD BANK GROUP, UNITED NATIONS
Number of pages
87
Reference numbers
ISBN: 978-92-806-5141-6
Copyright
United Nations Children’s Fund