Millennium Development Goals: the impact of healthcare interventions and changes in socioeconomic factors and sanitation on under-five mortality in Brazil.

The United Nations approved the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in 2000, including Target 4.A, or a two-thirds reduction in under-five mortality by 2015. Brazil reached this target in 2010. The current study aimed to analyze the trend in under-five mortality and the correlation with healthcare, socioeconomic, and sanitation indicators in Brazil's major geographic regions that helped the country meet the MDGs. This was an ecological study using secondary data for Brazil according to Intermediate Urban Linkage Regions (RIAU in Portuguese) from 2001 to 2017. Analyses of tendencies were performed with joinpoint and multiple linear regression models. The study showed a downward trend in the under-five mortality rate during the periods studied, with the largest statistically significant change from 2001 to 2010 (AAPC = -3.95; 95%CI: -4.3; -3.6), the lowest changes from 2011 to 2015 (AAPC = -2.35; 95%CI: -3.7; -1.0), and stabilized rates in 2016 and 2017 (AAPC = -0.07; ICC = -4.2; +4.3). Low income (extreme poverty) in the children's families and absence of maternal schooling were the variables most closely correlated with under-five mortality rate (r = 0.649, p < 0.001 and r = 0.640, p < 0.001, respectively). The fact that Brazil met the fourth target in the MDGs reflected the country's progress in reducing the under-five mortality rate, but the data suggest the rate's possible stabilization in recent years. Meanwhile, social and healthcare indicators revealed the importance of this reduction, challenging the country to maintain and further improve its public policies in this area.

[1]  R. Atun,et al.  Brazil's unified health system: the first 30 years and prospects for the future , 2019, The Lancet.

[2]  Cleyber Nascimento de Medeiros,et al.  Regime de chuvas e saúde infantil no estado do Ceará: evidências para os municípios em anos censitários (1991-2010) , 2019, Nova Economia.

[3]  D. Malta,et al.  Mortes evitáveis na infância, segundo ações do Sistema Único de Saúde, Brasil , 2019, Revista Brasileira de Epidemiologia.

[4]  Everlane Marques da Silva,et al.  Bolsa Família Programme and the reduction of child mortality in the municipalities of the Brazilian semiarid region. , 2019, Ciencia & saude coletiva.

[5]  A. Oyekale,et al.  Maternal Education, Fertility, and Child Survival in Comoros , 2018, International journal of environmental research and public health.

[6]  Patrícia Campos Borja,et al.  O programa de aceleração do crescimento no estado da Bahia e os desafios da universalização do saneamento básico , 2018, urbe. Revista Brasileira de Gestão Urbana.

[7]  E. Aquino,et al.  Saúde reprodutiva, materna, neonatal e infantil nos 30 anos do Sistema Único de Saúde (SUS) , 2018, Ciência & Saúde Coletiva.

[8]  A. M. Vasconcelos,et al.  Principais causas da mortalidade na infância no Brasil, em 1990 e 2015: estimativas do estudo de Carga Global de Doença. , 2017 .

[9]  S. Segura-Pérez,et al.  Conditional cash transfer programs and the health and nutrition of Latin American children. , 2016, Revista panamericana de salud publica = Pan American journal of public health.

[10]  Iris do Céu Clara Costa,et al.  Desigualdades regionais na mortalidade por câncer de colo de útero no Brasil: tendências e projeções até o ano 2030 , 2016 .

[11]  R. P. B. D. S. Cruz,et al.  A saúde das crianças no mundo e no Brasil , 2015 .

[12]  V. S. Santos,et al.  Inequalities in health: living conditions and infant mortality in Northeastern Brazil , 2015, Revista de saude publica.

[13]  Patrícia Campos Borja Política pública de saneamento básico: uma análise da recente experiência brasileira , 2014 .

[14]  Davide Rasella Impacto do Programa Água para Todos (PAT) sobre a morbi-mortalidade por diarreia em crianças do Estado da Bahia, Brasil , 2013 .

[15]  J. Teixeira,et al.  Associação entre cobertura por serviços de saneamento e indicadores epidemiológicos nos países da América Latina: estudo com dados secundários , 2012 .

[16]  C. Victora,et al.  Maternal and child health in Brazil: progress and challenges , 2011, The Lancet.

[17]  J. Macinko,et al.  Evaluation of the impact of the Family Health Program on infant mortality in Brazil, 1990–2002 , 2005, Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.