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Emma - Child Rights - Coggle Diagram
Emma - Child Rights
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The rate of sudden unexpected death in infancy (SUDI) among otherwise healthy infants is almost 8 times as high in areas with highest deprivation as in areas with lowest deprivation. SUDI rates for pēpi Māori and Pacific were almost five times as high as European babies.
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In 2019/20 one in five children lived in households where food ran out sometimes (15.6%) or often (4.3%) due to a lack of money.
While 88% of all babies at 8 months are fully immunized, for Māori, that dropped to only 77%.
around130,000 children in households are regularly going without basic essentials.
Terre des Hommes estimates at least 10,000 children are involved in Madagascar’s mica sector.
children as young as 4 were working in underground pits to mine mica in Madagascar. A majority of the minerals flow to China where they are processed into products shipped to the U.S., including hair dryers, batteries, even train parts.
Children working in mica mines have developed back and breathing problems from descending into darkened pits without safety gear
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this means that regardless of the gender, race ethnicity or other, the child will hold all these rights.
Around 11% of all New Zealand children have a disability, and around thirty percent live in a household where someone, not necessarily a child, has a disability
disabled children have higher rates of being in low-income households than non-disabled children, and children living in disabled households have higher rates than children in non-disabled households.
Children who live in a household where someone has a disability have hardship and material hardship rates roughly three times those of children living in a household here no-one has a disability.