| 21 Mai 2014
GENEVA ¦ 20 May 2014 -- Dr Christine Kaseba-Sata, First Lady of Zambia (WHO Goodwill  Ambassador against gender-based violence) and Melinda Gates, co-Chair of  the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation addressed delegates at the  World Health Assembly this afternoon.
 
 Dr Kaseba-Sata  deplored the prevalence of violence against women and  girls and the extent to which cases of violence remain hidden and  unrecognized.  A former gynaecologist, she noted the lasting damage such  violence can inflict on mental and physical health: “Almost all  gender-based violence victims fall on the doorstep of the health  sector.”
 
 She stressed that the health sector has a responsibility to address  the  causes and consequences of violence. She called on delegates to ensure  that everyone affected by violence has timely, effective and affordable  access to all the health services they require, and that those services   are free of abuse, disrespect, and discrimination.
 
 Ms Gates then highlighted ways to improve the health of mothers and  newborn babies,  emphasizing the value of linking efforts to improve  reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health – “the continuum of  care”.
 
 She pointed out that: “If women can plan their families, they are more  likely to space their pregnancies. If they space their pregnancies, they  are more likely to have healthy babies. If women’s babies are healthy,  they are more likely to flourish as children. When mothers have healthy  pregnancies, and when children thrive, the positive benefits last a  lifetime.”
 
 She also called on delegates to pay more attention to newborn babies.  Although there has been remarkable global progress in reducing the  number of children dying before their fifth birthdays, neonatal  mortality rates have declined at a slower pace. The Health Assembly will  discuss a new action plan for newborns later this week. Ms Gates and  other panellists at today’s technical briefing discussed quality of care  around childbirth and its potential to end preventable deaths of  mothers and newborn babies and stillbirths, generating  a “triple return  on investment”.