Thousands of children have died in church-run homes for unmarried women and their babies during the 20th century in Ireland, a report published by an independent commission on Tuesday said. “About 9,000 children died in the institutions under investigation — approximately 15% of all the children who were in the institutions,” said a final report of an inquiry into the mother-and-baby homes. The report said the children died in 18 different church-run facilities. Major causes of death included respiratory infections and gastroenteritis, otherwise known as the stomach flu. The report is part of an investigation into abuses in church-run institutions, including the shunning and shaming of unwed mothers, many of whom were pressured into giving up babies for adoption. It looked at 14 mother-and-baby homes and four county homes between the years 1922 and 1998, according to Irish broadcaster RTE. ‘No public concern’ The “the very high mortality rates were known to local and national authorities at the time and were recorded in official publications,” the report said, adding that “there is no evidence of public concern being expressed about conditions in mother-and-baby homes or about the appalling mortality among the children born in these homes, even though many of… Read full this story
- Enormous demand for low-cost homes: report
- More deaths at nursery schools reported, evoking outrage
- Ireland supports children with disabilities
- U.S. cancer death rates continue to decline, report finds
- Report finds some progress in gender equality in VN
- More premature death cases of cancer reported in “cement commune”
- 2015 World Drug Report finds drug use stable, access to drug & HIV treatment still low
- 25 Indonesian maids on death row in Saudi: report
- Vietnam's typhoon death toll hits 41: report
- Two more deaths after abortion pill reported in US
- Land lots, budget homes still find buyers
- 11 Siberian tigers starve to death in China zoo: report
Ireland: 9,000 children deaths in church-run homes, report finds have 303 words, post on www.dw.com at December 1, 2021. This is cached page on Konitono. If you want remove this page, please contact us.