key: cord-262431-0cragfka authors: Bhutta, Zulfiqar A.; Yount, Kathryn M.; Bassat, Quique; Arikainen, Artur A. title: Revisiting child and adolescent health in the context of the Sustainable Development Goals date: 2020-10-30 journal: PLoS Med DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1003449 sha: doc_id: 262431 cord_uid: 0cragfka nan . Effort is limited to bring mental-health programming to women and children, especially in conflict settings or emergencies such as the COVID-19 pandemic. These silos in research, planning and policy, and service delivery apply equally to other sectors, and to multisectoral planning and implementation at country level. To address the SDGs, we must consider life in the 21 st century-including the disruptions of technological change, economic shocks, climate change, and conflict and security. Thus, as we seek to reposition child health in the context of the SDGs and to eliminate preventable child deaths, we need a life-course perspective that is situated in a broader social and structural context. This framework recognizes the multilevel social contexts into which children are born and the long-term health impacts of early exposure to deprivation, inequality, and unsustainable growth. We recognize that healthy trajectories from birth to adolescence and beyond depend on the extent to which key stakeholders-governments, businesses, and civil societies-prioritize investments in human capabilities, reductions in inequality, and inclusive, sustainable economies [10] . In conceptualizing the life course from birth to adulthood in terms of trajectories of healthy growth, learning, and development, there are predictable touch points where investments can be made and progress monitored-growth before age 2 years, readiness for school, developmental and academic milestones in school, and social milestones with respect to family, peer, and dating relationships. A contextually situated lifecourse perspective for human development across childhood, as opposed to early childhood alone, conceptualizes exposures and opportunities from conception to adulthood, with each life stage building on the previous stages in social context. This 'contextual' and 'cumulative' perspective is important for understanding trajectories of survival, health and development throughout childhood and adolescence and the 'reciprocal' social and economic contributions that healthy, fulfilled adults can make to inclusive, sustainable societies. Recognizing the interconnectedness of capabilities also allows investments in one domain to attenuate vulnerabilities in another (e.g., ensuring that all children receive a high-quality education may attenuate vulnerabilities associated with stunting among the marginalized). Given the strong predictions of cumulative disadvantage for long-term health, disrupting these trajectories requires collaboration among key stakeholders. Some 2 decades after the world embarked on the MDGs, we need to focus on reaching the unreached through cross-sectoral delivery platforms and strategies that prioritize the most excluded and vulnerable [11] . Still, high-quality programs within the health system remain important, and require redesign to meet the needs of children and adolescents. Achieving this high quality will require inclusion of trained providers, competent delivery systems, and an emphasis on dignity and trust in provider-client relationships, especially with the most excluded. Today, the quality of services for sick children is substandard, with only 40% of recommended Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) clinical interventions delivered in a visit. System-wide deficits include minimal service offerings for adolescents, or even children beyond the age of 5 years, and misplaced services, with many births occurring in facilities that cannot care for the very sick newborn. The path forward for improvement is to focus on structural solutions that place the child and family at the center of the health system's mission, address social inclusion of marginalised groups, and help develop high-quality health systems for improving child health [12] . Health can be an entry point, yet collaboration across stakeholders and sectors, such as education, social media, and social protection, are critical to reduce disparities and foster capabilities for health and well-being. The SDGs have a broader agenda, translated into "survive-thrive-transform" in the Global Strategy for Women's, Children's and Adolescents' Health 2016-2030, with major targets and indicators in the health sector and beyond. We remain concerned that the gains in early child health painstakingly achieved in the MDG period are at risk of slowing down and losing priority. The global challenges of improving survival and health from birth through adolescence remain, and the world needs to redouble its efforts to do better, rather than declare victory prematurely and move on. In a forthcoming PLOS Medicine special issue [13] , we are inviting impactful research in this important area on strategies to monitor and combat child mortality globally from birth through adolescence, school-age health and welfare, marginalised populations, and the environmental impacts on children's health. We hope that this special issue will help to redirect attention to child and adolescent health in years to come. Early estimates of the indirect effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on maternal and child mortality in low-income and middleincome countries: a modelling study What is the Global Strategy? In: WHO. World Health Organization Nurturing care for early childhood development: Linking survive and thrive to transform health and human potential Framework and strategy for integrated monitoring and evaluation of child health programmes for responsive programming, accountability, and impact Adolescence and Social Determinants of Health: Family and Community, in Adolescent Health and Wellbeing Development and Validation of the Sexual and Reproductive Empowerment Scale for Adolescents and Young Adults. J Adolesc Health Off Publ Soc Adolesc Med Sexual and Reproductive Health Outcomes of Violence Against Women and Girls in Lower-Income Countries: A Review of Reviews Progress in adolescent health and wellbeing: tracking 12 headline indicators for 195 countries and territories Charting a Pathway to Multisectoral Investments in Adolescent Health in Low-and Middle-Income Countries High-quality health systems in the Sustainable Development Goals era: time for a revolution Special Issue: Global Child Health: From Birth to Adolescence and Beyond