London: The child deaths forecast has become a major concern as the Gates Foundation has estimated that around 200,000 more children will die before their fifth birthday this year compared to 2024.
This would raise the total from 4.6 million in 2024 to 4.8 million this year, marking the first increase in preventable deaths among young children in this century. According to the foundation, the shift has been driven largely by international aid cuts that have weakened global health support.
The data has been included in the Gates Foundation’s annual Goalkeepers report, which tracks progress toward United Nations development goals related to health and poverty reduction. The report is usually released in September but has been delayed due to uncertainty surrounding global health funding.
Bill Gates stated that decades of progress saving children’s lives have depended on consistent investment, and the reversal has come as multiple countries face economic strain and limited resources.

The foundation has noted that aid cuts began in the United States earlier this year but have since extended to major donors such as Britain and Germany. Overall, development assistance for health has fallen by just under 27 percent compared to 2024, reducing the capacity of vulnerable countries to maintain essential child health services.
The report has warned that if these funding cuts become long-term, the consequences could be severe. Depending on future investment, the number of additional child deaths could range between 12 million and 16 million by 2045. For this year alone, the projected increase may bring global child mortality figures back in line with those recorded in 2023, the most recent year with verified World Health Organization data.
The modelling behind the estimates has been conducted by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at Washington University. The foundation has emphasised that the trends reflect preventable causes and that renewed commitment from governments and private donors will be necessary to avoid further setbacks.
Bill Gates has urged governments, partners and individuals to prioritise proven interventions such as vaccination, nutrition programmes and primary healthcare investments. Gates added that new tools and innovations will also be required to strengthen health systems and protect vulnerable populations. The child deaths warning has been positioned as a call to action for the global community to prevent hard-won gains from being lost.

