Tuesday, November 03, 2009
Premature births worsen US infant death rate
By MIKE STOBBE
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Premature births, often due to poor care of low-income pregnant women, are the main reason the U.S. infant mortality rate is higher than in most European countries, a government report said Tuesday.

About 1 in 8 U.S. births are premature. Early births are much less common most of Europe; for example, only 1 in 18 babies are premature in Ireland and Finland.

Poor access to prenatal care, maternal obesity and smoking, too-early cesarean sections and induced labor and fertility treatments are among the reasons for preterm births, experts said.

Premature babies born before 37 weeks tend to be more fragile and have under-developed lungs, said the lead author of the new report, Marian MacDorman of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Premature births are the chief reason the U.S. ranks 30th in the world in infant mortality, with a rate more than twice as high as infant mortality rates in Sweden, Japan, Finland, Norway and the Czech Republic. For several years, the U.S. has ranked poorly among industrialized nations. MacDorman's report scrutinizes the reasons for that.

If U.S. infants were as mature as Sweden's are at birth, nearly 8,000 infant deaths could be avoided and the U.S. infant mortality rate would be about one-third lower than it is, according to a calculation by MacDorman and others at the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics.

Why so many more premature infants here? Experts offered several possible explanations:

_Fertility treatments and other forms of assisted reproduction probably play a role because they often lead to twins, triplets or other multiple births. Those children tend to be delivered early.

_The U.S. health care system doesn't guarantees prenatal care to pregnant women, particularly the uninsured, said Dr. Alan R. Fleischman, medical director for the March of Dimes.

_Maternal obesity and smoking have been linked to premature births and may also be a factor.

_Health officials are also concerned that doctors increasingly are inducing labor or performing C-sections before the 37th week. However, Fleischman said most infant deaths do not occur in babies just shy of 37 weeks gestation, but rather in those much younger,

Labor was induced in nearly 16 percent of premature births in 2006, up from about 8 percent in 1991. Cesarean sections were done in 36 percent of preterm births, up from 25 percent in 1991, MacDorman said. Continued...

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flash, I would like to use your referenc
I want to use your birth tables to prove to a friend that it is the old ladies and 15 year olds that are causing our premature birth rate.

Could you send me a link?

Did you know that Europeans don't count a birth until one month after the actual birth and that is why they have a slightly longer life expectancy? At least that's what I remember reading somewhere. I need to keep track of my sources. Sorry.

Interesting they don't mention age
We have a bimodal distribution of the ages of mothers having babies.
On the one hand, we have 15 year old girls getting pregnant because its the in thing to do in inner cities. They have higher premature birth rates. The second is we have a lot of older women who realize that their careers just weren't as fulfilling as they thought, and now are too old to have babies without artificial help. They too, have more premature births.
We are a victim of our own screwed up sense of values, where stay at home married moms are deemed inferior.
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