For the Region to achieve key targets and goals – including a 35% reduction in folic acid-preventable neural tube defects, a 50% reduction in thalassemia births, and to eliminate congenital syphilis – several priorities must be addressed. First, gaps in rubella immunization must be closed, and access to good quality antenatal care improved. Such care should incorporate counselling that encourages pregnant women to avoid unnecessary medications and X-rays, prevent exposure to toxic environmental elements, and avoid harmful products such as tobacco and alcohol. Second, access to pre-natal screening technologies such as ultrasound must be increased, in addition to clinical and laboratory screening of newborns and infants. Primary health care providers should be trained to support diagnosis and referral, which in most health systems is feasible.
Third, the quality of medical therapy, surgery, rehabilitation and palliative care services must be enhanced, and referral pathways better defined and utlilized. Affected children and their families must have ongoing access to appropriate mental health and psycho-social support services, and be free of stigma and discrimination. Fourth, data collection, monitoring and evaluation must continue to be strengthened, and policies and programmes assessed on an ongoing basis. Equity, efficiency and impact must continue to define all we do.
Our WBDD movement must continue to build. Birth defects are common, costly, and critical. Across the Region, they account for an increasingly large proportion of under-five mortality as other causes continue to decline. Together, we must continue to integrate interventions to increase birth defect prevention, surveillance, care and research across programme areas, accelerating progress towards our Flagship Priorities and “Sustain. Accelerate. Innovate” vision. On World Birth Defects Day, WHO reaffirms its commitment to ensuring every woman and child can survive and thrive, and transform our Region and world.