altThe first report of the UN Secretary-General's independent Expert Review Group (iERG)* on Information and Accountability for Women's and Children's Health, to be launched on September 26 at the UN General Assembly, concludes that although headline reductions in maternal and child mortality during the past decade have been impressive in some countries, millions of women and children still die every year from preventable causes. Unless those causes are more urgently addressed globally and in countries, Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) 4 and 5 will not be met by most nations by the target year of 2015. What is more, declining rates of donor funding and a failure to target resources to the countries with the greatest need could have devastating consequences for the survival of millions of women and children worldwide.

The key findings of the iERG's report are:


  1. Strengthen the global governance framework for women's and children's health: There is currently a damaging governance gap between partner countries, multilateral agencies, donors, NGOs, health professionals, researchers, foundations, and the private sector.
  2. Devise a global investment framework for women's and children's health: There is currently no strategic approach or effective mechanism to guide investments on behalf of women and children.
  3. Set clearer country-specific strategic priorities for implementing the Global Strategy and test innovative mechanisms for delivering these priorities: Priorities across the continuum of care need to be sharpened during the 3 years remaining to the MDG target date of 2015.
  4. Accelerate the uptake and evaluation of eHealth and mHealth technologies: The evidence on which to base decisions about implementation of information and communication technology is weak or non-existent.
  5. Strengthen human rights tools and frameworks to achieve better health and accountability for women and children: Human rights treaty bodies that interface with health should routinely incorporate the health of women and children into their work.
  6. Expand the commitment and capacity to evaluate initiatives for women's and children's health: Evaluation—the relentless pursuit of results—must become a much stronger foundation for independent accountability.