Skip to main content

BABIES BORN INTO CRISIS: The most dangerous places to take a first breath this winter

Can you imagine a child being born without safety, medicine or care? 

Every day, 6,000 newborn babies die most from causes that could be prevented. Around the world, mothers are giving birth in tents, on the move, or in overcrowded hospitals without electricity, clean water, or trained medical support. Every two minutes, a woman dies from complications in pregnancy or childbirth.

This winter, countless babies will take their first breath in the midst of war, disaster, and hunger. But with your help, that first breath doesn’t have to be their last.

Save the Children is delivering lifesaving care to mothers and newborns in the world’s toughest places. From operating mobile clinics and maternity units to training local midwives and providing medicine, clean water, and safe places to give birth.

This winter you can help mothers give birth safely. You can help a baby take their first safe breath. Please donate now.

YOUR $150 GIFT COULD help train a community health worker to give newborns a safe start in life.

The majority of newborn and maternal deaths are preventable. But unless we can reach more mothers with lifesaving care, countless babies will not survive their first days of life.

This winter, give the gift of hope. Donate now, and you’ll help us reach mothers and newborns with lifesaving support in the most dangerous places to be born.

Together, we can help mothers and babies in the world’s toughest places.

Every day, 6,000 newborn babies die - the majority from preventable causes

In 2025, babies are being born into some of the hardest conditions in living memory. Wars have torn families apart. Climate disasters have destroyed entire communities. Hunger and disease are stealing childhoods.

Yet even in the chaos of war, disaster and hunger, life finds a way. Babies have been born in tents, on the move, or in overcrowded, under-equipped hospitals. Mothers have given birth without electricity, clean water or medicine.

The numbers are staggering:

  • 2.4 million newborns die each year, most from preventable causes like premature birth, infection, or complications during labour.

  • Every 36 seconds, a baby is stillborn.

  • Every 2 minutes, a woman dies from complications in pregnancy or childbirth.

  • In places like Sudan, 30% of women give birth without skilled assistance, and maternal mortality is among the highest in the world.

  • In Somalia, only 32% of births are attended by skilled health personnel, one of the lowest rates globally.

  • Babies in Gaza are dying after almost 2 years of war obliterated the healthcare system and housing.

  • The maternal mortality rate in Yemen is the highest in the Middle East with 1 woman dying every 2 hours from childbirth or pregnancy related causes.

These deaths are avoidable. With skilled midwives, clean water, safe places to give birth, and urgent medicine, babies and mothers can survive.

Donate now and help deliver hope to babies born into war, hunger and disaster.

Asma*, 30 holds her newborn baby Sara*, 4 days old at a mobile clinic, Sudan

Mussab Hassona / Save the Children

Why Your Support Is Critical for Safe Births in Crisis Zones

Save the Children is delivering urgent care to mothers and babies around the world. Our maternity units and mobile clinics are saving lives every day:

  • In Rwanda, we’re using drones to deliver medicine and blood directly to a health centre at Mahama camp. This has been a game changer, reducing infant and mother mortality as well as post-partum complications.

  • In Colombia, our maternity facility is helping Venezuelan refugees give birth safely.

  • In Kenya, we worked closely with the Ministry of Health to establish Kangaroo Mother Care a frequently lifesaving process involving skin-to-skin contact between the baby and mother as standard practice in the care of pre-term and low birth weight babies.

  • In Bangladesh, our Save the Children maternity boat travels to pregnant women in water-surrounded communities who are unable to travel. Known as ‘Mamotar Tori’, or ‘The Boat of Affection’, it brings midwives and medical supplies to remote villages.

  • In Ethiopia, where 14% of babies are born with low birth weight, we are trialling a new solution to help families and health workers identify low birth weight and premature newborns using simple body measurements like foot length.

With your support, we can keep more health services running and ensure mothers and babies in crisis can access the emergency healthcare they need to survive. Please donate today.

For every $1 you donate we spend