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  1. 20 gru 2021 · The UN IGME undertook an analysis of excess mortality among children, adolescents and youth as well as stillbirths in 2020 and 2021 for its most recent annual child mortality report: Levels and Trends in Child Mortality: Report 2022, which provides country, regional and global estimates of mortality for ages 0-24 years up to 2021, and for its ...

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      Every year, vaccines save an estimated 2 to 3 million lives,...

  2. Every year, vaccines save an estimated 2 to 3 million lives, but COVID-19 threatens to roll back decades of progress made in reducing preventable child deaths by hindering access to these life-saving services. According to new data, nearly 14 million children did not receive any vaccines in 2019. Read more.

  3. 22 lip 2023 · WHO COVID-19 Dashboard is updated every Friday for the period of two weeks prior. Counts primarily reflect laboratory-confirmed cases and deaths, based upon WHO case definitions; although some departures may exist due to local adaptations.

  4. This chart shows the number of confirmed COVID-19 deaths per day. Three points on confirmed death figures to keep in mind. All three points are true for all currently available international data sources on COVID-19 deaths:

  5. We found that globally, the heart-breaking hidden pandemic of over 5·2 million children affected by orphanhood and caregiver death, has outpaced the 5·0 million COVID-19 deaths. These data identify an almost one-to-one correspondence in the magnitude of COVID-19 deaths and that of children's COVID-19-associated loss of parents and caregivers.

  6. Economic decline in the second quarter of 2020 vs. total confirmed COVID-19 deaths (as of August 2020) England: COVID-19 monthly death rate by vaccination status. Estimated cumulative excess deaths during COVID Faceted Explorer version. Estimated cumulative excess deaths during COVID, from the WHO.

  7. 29 wrz 2021 · Overview. SARS-CoV-2 infections among children and adolescents cause less severe illness and fewer deaths compared to adults. While a less severe course of infection is a positive outcome, there are concerns that mild symptoms may have led to less testing, resulting in fewer identified cases of COVID-19 in children.

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