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Direct and indirect effects of COVID-19 pandemic and response in South Asia - Afghanistan

Direct and indirect effects of COVID-19 pandemic and response in South Asia Format Attachments Disruptions in health services due to COVID-19 “may have contributed to an additional 239,000 child and maternal deaths in South Asia” - new UN report Kathmandu/Bangkok/New Delhi, 17 March 2021: Drastic cuts in the availability and use of essential public health services across South Asia due to COVID-19 may have contributed to an estimated 228,000 additional child deaths in 2020, according to a new United Nations report. Around 11,000 additional maternal deaths are also expected. Clinics and other health facilities have been closed and many vital health and nutrition programmes halted as the region battles to contain COVID-19 cases, which numbered 11 million by the end of 2020.

Devastation, Challenge, Opportunity: Covid-19 Pandemic s Impact On Women, Children In South Asia

Wednesday, 17 March 2021, 7:10 pm Disruptions in health services due to COVID-19 “may have contributed to an additional 239,000 child and maternal deaths in South Asia” - New UN report Health services must urgently be restored and strengthened to contain the pandemic’s impact on the most vulnerable families Kathmandu/Bangkok/New Delhi, 17 March 2021: Drastic cuts in the availability and use of essential public health services across South Asia due to COVID-19 may have contributed to an estimated 228,000 additional child deaths in 2020, according to a new United Nations report. Around 11,000 additional maternal deaths are also expected. Clinics and other health facilities have been closed and many vital health and nutrition programmes

Disruptions in health services due to COVID-19 may have contributed to an additional 239,000 child and maternal deaths in South Asia

Press release Disruptions in health services due to COVID-19 “may have contributed to an additional 239,000 child and maternal deaths in South Asia” - UN report Health services must urgently be restored and strengthened to contain the pandemic’s impact on the most vulnerable families 17 March 2021 UNICEF KATHMANDU/BANGKOK/NEW DELHI, 17 March 2021 - Drastic cuts in the availability and use of essential public health services across South Asia due to COVID-19 may have contributed to an estimated 228,000 additional child deaths in 2020, according to a new United Nations report. Around 11,000 additional maternal deaths are also expected. Clinics and other health facilities have been closed and many vital health and nutrition programmes halted as the region battles to contain COVID-19 cases, which numbered 11 million by the end of 2020.

Study Shows Hate, Violence & Victim-Blaming Against Women Increased Amidst The Pandemic

news Study Shows Hate, Violence & Victim-Blaming Against Women Increased Amidst The Pandemic The study also showed that social media users agreed with the idea that using informal justice in cases of violence against women and girls was a better option than relying on justice institutions, which they do not trust. By Sadho Ram — 07 Mar 2021, 05:59 PM — Updated about 1 month ago The risk of violence against women and girls increases during crises and the COVID-19 pandemic is no exception, according to a new study In a big data analysis, spanning 15 months from September 2019 to November last year, the study found that online misogyny, trolling, sexual harassment, and victim-blaming against women has increased.

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