Beginning in 2000, Saving Newborn Lives (SNL) was the first newborn health program of its kind, elevating the contribution of Save the Children and its partners in this area. This impulse generated a movement for newborn health and an unprecedented legacy, shared by SNL partners around the world.

Over the last two decades, the program has worked in 32 countries, building close partnerships with governments, multilateral agencies, nongovernmental organizations and stakeholders, as well as health professionals through extensive newborn and perinatal research, advocacy, and program implementation.

As more than two-thirds of newborn deaths can be prevented by increasing the coverage of existing newborn health interventions, it is imperative to increase the allocation of existing resources to ensure quality newborn and maternal health care.

A series of e-Talks to be held in September and October 2020 will mark the 20th anniversary of SNL, offering an opportunity for the global community to discuss the unfinished agenda for newborn and perinatal health and priorities for the future.

SNL Newborn Health Legacy Timeline

Newborn Health Legacy Literature

The table below includes publications produced through the Saving Newborn Lives program, with a focus on the final two phases of the program: SNL 3 (2013-2018) and SNL 4 (2019-2020). Over the past 20 years, SNL and partners produced numerous briefs, articles, reports, and other documents, about 300 of which during SNL 3 and SNL 4.

We are pleased to share some of these seminal publications as background documents in support of the Legacy e-Talks. The table also includes key newborn health literature produced by SNL partners over the years, critical for the understanding of achievements, lessons learned, challenges and future priorities in this issue area.

Documents are organized per e-Talks Days and Sessions, and can be searched using keywords and tags available on the table. Scroll down and across the columns and rows to see all documents.

CALL TO ACTION

Save the Children’s Saving Newborn Lives (SNL) initiative is celebrating 20 years of targeted action in newborn health, reflecting global, regional, national, and local partner support and commitment around the world.  Despite this progress, too many women and their newborns—including stillborn babies—die every year due to complications in pregnancy, childbirth, and the first 30 days of life. In 2019, as highlighted in the IGME child mortality report, there were 5.2 million deaths in children under 5, with 2.4 million (46 percent) in neonates and millions more in need of small and sick inpatient newborn care in order to survive and thrive. In this time of pandemic crisis, our mission as a global community of stakeholders committed to reaching mothers and their newborns with high-impact interventions along the continuum of care is more important than ever. This is especially true as we redouble our efforts to accelerate progress toward Every Newborn targets and milestones and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) targets 3.1 and 3.2, for maternal, newborn, and child health.

 

Saving Newborn Lives – Newborn Health Legacy Call to Action

  1. Advance Every Newborn Action Plan 2025 coverage targets and milestones and the SDGs by working collaboratively with Ministries of Health and other key stakeholders to ensure investment and political will lead to actions that amplify progress.
  2. Accelerate universal provision of respectful high quality care that is family-centered and supports a nurturing environment for newborns and their mothers in all settings while improving access to family planning and other reproductive health services. 
  3. Prioritize the mother and child dyad and integrate early childhood development, WASH/infection prevention and control, and other MNH interventions that babies and their mothers, including young and first time mothers, need to survive and thrive.
  4. Support universal access to high quality care for small and sick newborns by testing and scaling nascent opportunities while ramping up proven solutions like kangaroo mother care through advocacy, standard indicators, facilitative infrastructure, country specific plans, and an increased focus on follow up care following facility discharge.
  5. Improve MNH reach and coverage equity in fragile, humanitarian, and hard to reach settings and with marginalized groups in urban areas where mortality is often highest.
  6. Measure and report MNH progress and outcomes while strengthening partner capacities to use data for continuous quality improvement.

Over the last 20 years, Save the Children and a broad and deep coalition of partners representing government, donors, civil society, and the communities and families we serve have worked collaboratively to elevate newborn health and survival as a public health priority, firmly anchoring the “N” in MNH. We have accomplished a great deal, but more needs to be done. We invite you to champion the agenda for mothers and newborns in your conversations, through platforms to share experience, knowledge, and evidence, and in meaningful engagement with and support to local partners and stakeholders. We all have a role to play in galvanizing global and local action for mothers and their children—please join us.  Learn more at the Healthy Newborn Network.

Endorsement

Please join us in this endeavor by endorsing the Call to Action to save newborn lives below.