world concern statistics

Convincing figures of a hurting world

Children

Compare the infant mortality rate in some countries we serve with the rate in the U.S.:

(deaths/1,000 live births)

  • Somalia: 110.97
  • Chad: 100.36
  • Sudan: 86.98
  • Burkina Faso: 86.02
  • Laos: 79.61
  • United States: 6.30
    • (source: CIA - The World Factbook - 200

Education

  • Literacy rates in some countries where we work are as low as 25%
  • Only 40% of men and 28% of women ages 15-24 in Burkina Faso know how to read or write
  • Sub-Saharan Africa accounts for 47% of the world's out-of-school children; 54% are girls
  • There are an estimated 500,000 hearing impaired children in Bangladesh, but only 36 schools with a capacity for 1,750 students
  • Fewer than 50 percent of all Kenyan children attend school
  • Many families cannot afford mandatory school uniforms for their children without World Concern's help
    • sources: CIA, UNESCO and World Concern

Hunger

  • More than one third of child deaths worldwide are attributed to undernutrition
  • Chronic malnutrition has stunted the growth of out 178 million children worldwide, with the highest rates in Africa and Asia
  • Stunted growth causes brain development to lag
  • About 20% of deaths of children under-five could be avoided with proper nutrition
  • Proper nutrition may help delay the progression of HIV/AIDS
  • Close to half of Haiti's population is affected by food insecurity
    • Sources: World Health Organization, World Concern

Income

  • Extreme poverty is defined as living on less than $1.25 per day
  • 1.4 billion people (one in four) live in extreme poverty
  • Extreme poverty is most common in Sub-Saharan Africa, SE Asia and Central America, areas where we work
  • More than 5 million people live in Bangladeshi slums
  • 45% of people in Bangladesh live in poverty
  • 60% of people in Bolivia live in poverty
  • Money lenders on the streets of Bangladesh may charge 50% to 100% interest annually on microloans
  • World Concern's average annual interest rates of approximately 24% cover administrative expenses and facilitate lending to others
    • UNICEF, World Concern, CIA "The World Factbook"

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Health

The pursuit of good health - a long journey

  • AIDS remains the #1 killer in Sub-Saharan Africa
  • 33 million people have AIDS worldwide
  • 23 million people with AIDS live in Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Intestinal parasites infect roughly 40% of the world's children
  • Parasites consume essential nutrients and cause anemia, malnutrition, skin disorders and stunted growth
  • More than half a million women die every year of complications during pregnancy or childbirth; most of these deaths can be avoided with proper medical care
  • Sources: UNAIDS, UNICEF, World Health Organization

Water

Most people cannot get enough water

  • Diarrhoeal disease alone is responsible for 1.8 million deaths annually
  • In sub-Saharan Africa, 42% of the population lacks improved water
  • In 2002, 1.1 billion people lacked access to improved water sources (about one out of six people)
  • Of those 1.1 billion people, nearly two thirds live in Asia
  • Droughts cause the most ill-health and death because they often trigger and exacerbate malnutrition and famine
  • Between 28 and 35 million people in Bangladesh consume drinking-water with elevated levels of arsenic
    • Source: World Health Organization

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