Violence, accidents kill world's youth
UK: Road accidents, pregnancy and childbirth complications, suicide,
violence, the AIDS virus and tuberculosis are the biggest killers of
young people across the world, according to a study published on Friday.
Researchers supported by the World Health Organisation (WHO) said
their study the first to look at global death rates in those aged 10 to
24 exposed as myth adolescents' belief that they are stronger and fitter
than other age groups.
In reality, they said, 2.6 million young people are dying each year
and most of those deaths are preventable. Some 97 percent of the deaths
were in low- and middle-income countries.
"Mortality rates in low-income and middle-income countries were
almost four-fold higher than were those in high-income countries, a
difference that was particularly pronounced for young women," the
authors wrote on their study in The Lancet.
According to the WHO, there are more young people in the world today
than ever before 1.8 billion 10 to 14 year-olds account for 30 percent
of the world's population.
But George Patton of the Centre for Adolescent Health and Murdoch
Children's Research Institute in Australia, who led the study, said the
needs of this age group were often eclipsed by the very young, the
elderly or the very sick when governments draw up health policies an
approach he said was increasingly risky as economic development
continues. LONDON, Friday, Reuters |