The report by the British-based organisation said Pakistan had the highest rate of first day deaths and stillbirths at 40.7 per 1,000 births, followed by Nigeria (32.7), Sierra Leone (30.8), Somalia (29.7), Guinea-Bissau (29.4) and Afghanistan (29.0).
In Pakistan, fewer than half of women had a skilled health worker present at birth.
Attempts to improve this have been dogged by "delays in the salary disbursements, 'stock-outs' of medicines, unavailable and dysfunctional equipment, and an unhelpful referral system", the report said.
Million babies a year die within 24 hours
The report also revealed that a million newborn babies a year die within 24 hours of birth, urging the governments to tackle preventable deaths.
The report said 6.6 million children around the world died in 2012 before their fifth birthday, mostly from preventable causes.
The number has almost halved from the 12.6 million in 1990, but there remains a "deplorable problem of lack of attention to babies in their first days of life", the aid organisation said.
In its report, entitled "Ending Newborn Deaths", it said one million babies did not survive their first 24 hours of life in 2012.
It said two million babies could be saved each year if preventable newborn mortality was ended.
"Child mortality remains one of the great shames of our modern world. Every day, 18,000 children under five die, and most from preventable causes," the report said.
"Unless we urgently start to tackle deaths among newborn babies, there is a real danger that progress in reducing child deaths could stall and we will fail in our ambition to be the generation that can end all preventable child deaths."
It said the reduction since 1990 had been achieved through immunisation, family planning, better nutrition and treatment of childhood illnesses, as well as improving economies.
India had the highest number of first day deaths and stillbirths at 598,038 per year -- a quarter of the 2.2 million lives lost.
The under-five mortality rate in India has been more than halved since 1990, from 126 per 1,000 live births to 56.1.
"(Indian) states with strong health systems and implementation mechanisms have done exceedingly well compared with others," the report said.
Call for action
Save the Children, which operates in more than 120 countries, called on world leaders, philanthropists and the private sector to commit to ending preventable newborn deaths.
They said they would present their action plan to government ministers.
They want governments to issue declarations on ending preventable newborn mortality.
Save the Children wants them to ensure that by 2025, every birth is attended by trained and equipped health workers, and user fees for maternal and newborn health services are removed.
They demanded a commitment to spending at least $60 per capita on training maternity workers.
The also urged pharmaceutical companies to increase the availability of products for the poorest new mothers.
"In many cases, small but crucial interventions can save lives in danger. Skilled care during labour could reduce the number of stillbirths during labour by 45 per cent and prevent 43 per cent of newborn deaths," the report said.
COMMENTS (23)
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@imran bhatt: I hope you were being sarcastic? Alcohol in perfume and Indian movies are a more urgent problem than children dying needlessly? Seriously? This is a highly significant report. ET is to be commended for highlighting it. Sadly most people are either fools or cowardly hypocrites or both, they cannot face the truth, they cannot face the effort needed to change how things are, they prefer that someone takes them by the neck and pushes their heads into the sand.
@imran bhatt: This is bad sarcasm ....
@Bala: India is ten times bigger than Srilanka in population and size. Never compare India with small countries like SL
@Saqib: @imran bhatt:
Is Imran Bhatt your real name or Saqib or something else? Be as it may, my heart moves for the innocent infants and children who are pronounced dead even before they breathe a whiff of life. That is the stark reality of Pakistan that is fast sliding into the Medieval abyss. Whether I have passed my high school or not -- I am in the medical research field, if you would like to know - is immaterial because I would not like to dignify that personal (but totally unfounded and unjust) jibe with a response. But what is more important here is that educated Pakistanis must see to it that their country is not hijacked by selfish, parochial and primitive leaders and mullahs who cause great harm with their deafening emphasis on programmes that suit their personal agenda. One way to improve conditions in the country is by promoting modern education that can lead to nation building. Otherwise, Pakistan is going to fall below other rogue nations such as Somalia, Central African Republic, Sudan, etc. Bangladesh, despite its problems, is far ahead of Pakistan in many areas. And we don't have to think of comparing Pakistan with India or China which are heads above Pakistan.
@Dr. Shafique: me thinks dat is sarcasm....
Wow...now Pakistan is competing with Somalia..naya Pakistan ....
Enough of this nonsense of comparison with India etc. Why dont you guys buck up and move towards the betterment. Has India ever compared with Pakistan for anything?
@Dr. Shafique: Do you realise that his comment was pure sarcasm ?
p r sharma and Dr. Shafique How can you be so dumb?
It's a question of priorities - Pakistan chose nukes, cruise missiles, and expensive high tech military weapons - should have allocated more towards basic health care. This is definitely not a list you want to be high on - let alone number one.
@BruteForce:
Well of course all progress is good as we are talking about children's lives. But is it enough? As someone has correctly pointed out Sri Lanka who has a much lower per capita GDP and is just recovering from a 2 decades long civil war as far superior numbers. Clearly a greater focus on health is needed.
@p r sharma: @Dr. Shafique:
Imran was being sarcastic
. Also the World Bank has quoted an outdated Child mortality rate number for India which refers to 2011. Child mortality rate (which is called U5MR or unxer 5 mortality rate was 52 as oer the 2012 SRS which was published in 2012.
@Dr. Shafique: Dr Shafique, if that is your real name, I appreciate your concern, however you both missed my point in your zealousness. Ever heard about satire or sarcasm or mockery or ridicule?
@p r sharma: Mr P R Sharma, if that is your real name, I appreciate your concern, however you both missed my point in your zealousness. Ever heard about satire or sarcasm or mockery or ridicule?
@imran bhatt:
You must have come out from under the stone. What bizarre and totally absurd argument! Half the infants born in Pakistan die because of inadequate or complete lack of healthcare. How does Bollywood and other Indian "vices" come into the picture??!! I suppose you also don't care what the WHO has to say about Pakistan -- that nearly 50% of Pakistanis born in this century could be cripples (aided not just by the inbreeding through inter-family marriages but also, more critically, by the absence of polio vaccination). While you see conspiratorial shadows in your backyard, the country is going - or already has gone - to the dogs. The educated and nation-building classes of Pakistan must rise to combat this India obsession which is leading us nowhere but towards depletion of resources and towards even greater backwardness. Opportunistic politicians, military and the mullahs have used the anti-India posturing to fill their pockets and strengthen their position. This has got to stop. We need to educate like this guy Imran Bhatt and his ilk who, when they find anything wrong in Pakistan, will raise their finger to find a scapegoat -- in this peculiar case, India. Time to stop this nonsense which is harming us more than our neighbor.
@imran bhatt: child death is a non issue for the likes of you. you have kept your priority elsewhere. Great people !!! continue to remain at top ( For not caring the maternity health services)
@Bala: pakistan is itself a failed state