Rising infant mortality rate in Gaza fuels blockade fears – UN

The infant mortality rate in Gaza has risen for the first time in more than half a century, according to the United Nations, raising concerns about the impact of the Israeli blockade on health facilities in the region.

Healthcare in Gaza has also been disrupted by several armed conflicts in recent years, which may have affected the health of infants, according to the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA).

The agency for Palestinian refugees, which conducts a survey on infant mortality across the region every five years, said the upswing was "alarming" and unprecedented in the Middle East. "Progress in combating infant mortality doesn't usually reverse ... the only other examples I can think of are in some African countries which experienced HIV epidemics," UNRWA's health programme director, Akihiro Seita, said in a statement.

The number of babies dying before the age of one rose to 22.4 per 1,000 live births in 2013, having fallen from 127 in 1960 to 20.2 in 2008, according to UNRWA. The rate of neonatal mortality, which is the number of babies that die before four weeks old, also increased, to 20.3 per 1,000 live births in 2013 from 12 in 2008.

While the agency was not certain of the exact causes behind the increase in the infant mortality rate, Seita said that Israel's blockade of the coastal enclave could be a contributing factor: "We are very concerned about the impact of the long-term blockade on health facilities, supplies of medicines and bringing equipment in to Gaza."

Israel imposed a blockade on the Gaza Strip after the Islamist movement Hamas won power there in elections in 2006, and both Egypt and Israel maintain tight controls on the movement of goods and people in and out of the territory.

The UN body, which conducted the survey before last year's conflict, said it would carry out another this year due to the latest findings.   (Thomson Reuters Foundation)

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