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Progress in the Global Fight Against Child Mortality, US infant mortality rate ranks behind China

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Progress in the Global Fight Against Child Mortality, US infant mortality rate ranks behind China​

INFANT MORTALITY

by Katharina Buchholz,
Nov 2, 2023

Even though the world has made progress in reducing the mortality rate of children under the age of one, infant deaths continue to be prevalent in developing countries. Especially post-neonatal deaths - those occurring between the ages of 2 and 11 months - continue with a higher prevalence in lower-income countries, the same as deaths between the ages of 1 and 4 years.

According to UNICEF, the majority of child deaths under age 5 are preventable. Major reasons for them include pneumonia, diarrhoea and malaria, while preterm birth and complications during delivery are also big factors for the deaths of younger children. North America and the United States specifically are an outlier in the statistic, ranking behind Europe and other high-income nations for all types of child mortality. The country's infant mortality rate stood at 5.4 in 2021, according to UNICEF calculations, behind China's and close to the rates of Sri Lanka, Romania, Bulgaria and Chile. In 2022, infant mortality in the country rose, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced yesterday.

According to the data, infants in the African countries of Sierra Leone, Central African Republic, Somalia and Nigeria have the greatest risk of not reaching their first birthday. Mortality rates exceed 70 in 1,000 live births in all four nations. Pakistan is the lowest ranked country not on the African continent at 52.8 infant deaths per 1,000 live births.

Estonia is at the opposite end of the spectrum with an infant mortality rate of 1.6 per 1,000 live births, the highest-ranked non-micro nation. Japan ranked second, sharing with Singapore, followed by Norway, Finland and Slovenia in rank 3.

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US per capita GDP is much higher than China only on paper, while the country suffers shorter life expectancy and higher infant mortality than China, and China has 1.4 billion people, one fifth of the world humanity.
 
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China spends money on the people's wellbeing and convenience while US on waging wars, no wonder most Chinese believe China a democracy while most Americans believe US not.

 
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Well they can't afford to go to the hospital. And homeless people get raped and pregnant all the time.
 
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They say they don't have money for high speed railways and subways, but they have the money to support hundreds military bases all over the world. They say that don't have the money to provide adequate medical service, but they have the money to give to Ukraine and Israel to wage wars.
 
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USA 5.4 is not bad actually.

My country is 18.9.

People are not serious here!

At least we are still above average.

There is still a lot of work to do.
 
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More babies are dying in the US: Details on the troubling trend​

USA TODAY
Nov 2, 2023

A teenage mom delivered a baby boy in fetal distress at 25 weeks gestation. Doctors tried to resuscitate the child – with ventilation, cardiac compressions, chest tubes and other methods – to no avail. The neonatologist later discovered that the mother had a previously undiagnosed case of syphilis.

The baby’s death at a Wisconsin hospital illustrates some the dangers babies face in their first year of life. It's also the type of scenario doctors are examining as they try to understand a grim new trend. For the first time in two decades, the number of U.S. infants who died in their first year of life is on the rise, according to provisional data from the National Center for Health Statistics, or NCHS.

“We don’t live in a vacuum,” Dr. Dennis Costakos, director of neonatal and perinatal medicine at the Mayo Clinic Health System in La Crosse, Wisconsin, told USA TODAY. “The health of the baby is often directly related to the health of the mother.”

Experts consider infant mortality a key indicator of overall population health. The latest federal statistics reflect a jump in the death rate for just one year, 2022; however, they raise concerns because the U.S. has also failed in other key population metrics: maternal mortality rate has increased and the average life expectancy is declining.

Increases 'add up to general trend'

The NCHS report marks the first statistically significant increase in infant deaths since 2002. Before this report, the U.S. had seen a 22% decline in child deaths over 20 years, although the U.S. continually had higher infant death rates than other high-income countries.

The change in 2022 data represents a notable moment for public health officials: an increase to 5.6 infant deaths per 1,000 live births, compared with 5.44 in 2021.

“All of these increases, even the small increases, they all just add up to a general trend,” report author Danielle Ely, an NCHS health statistician, told USA TODAY.

The report used figures from the National Vital Statistics System of birth and death records across 50 states and the District of Columbia for children's first year of life. The provisional figures will be finalized in a report expected next spring. However, its authors decided to release the data early to provide a warning to healthcare providers and officials of the growing trend.

The figures also correspond with the child poverty rate doubling in 2022. Another factor for providers to consider: expanded Medicaid coverage that was available during the COVID-19 pandemic has been cut.

Keeping women and children in good health has to be a conscientious, proactive undertaking said Georgia Machell, interim president and CEO of the National WIC Association, a nonprofit that represents nutrition service provider agencies that implement the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for the Women, Infants and Children program.

“There needs to be investment in the safeguards in order to support families to reduce infant mortality,” Machell said.

The increase in 2022 infant deaths spanned several demographic groups, with some demographic groups being spared.

The largest statistical uptick in infant deaths was among babies born to Native American and non-Hispanic white women between 2021 and 2022 – for Indigenous infants, from 7.46 to 9.06 per 1,000 births, and for white infants, from 4.36 to 4.52. The infant death rate among children born to Black women climbed from 10.55 to 10.86. Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders also saw a small rise in infant deaths (from 7.76 to 8.5), as did Hispanic people (4.79 to 4.88), though deaths of infants born to Asian American women declined, from 3.69 to 3.5.

Additionally, there were rises in the death rates of babies born preterm – at less than 37 weeks gestation – as well as the rates of infants who died less than 28 days after birth, and those who died 28 days or more into their first year. There were small increases in death rates of babies of mothers 24 and younger and babies born to women 30 to 39. And there was a significant jump in deaths of babies born to mothers 25 to 29.

Among the 10 leading causes of death for babies, maternal complications and bacterial sepsis saw increases in mortalities, the report said.

These states saw biggest rise in infant mortality rates

The deaths were far higher in some regions of the country: Georgia, Iowa, Missouri and Texas saw significant increases in infant mortality rates.

Several of these states moved to restrict abortion access since the U.S. Supreme Court outlawed the constitutional right to abortion in June 2022, though experts warned it may be too soon to gauge any correlation between restricted access to reproductive healthcare and infant mortality.

“Any time we see it trending in the wrong direction, our alarm bells are going off,” said Dr. Allison Gemmill, an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins University’s Bloomberg School of Public Health and a demographer, in a phone interview.

Gemmill has forthcoming research suggesting there was a rise in infant and neonatal mortality in Texas after lawmakers in 2021 enacted Senate Bill 8, a law banning abortion once a fetal heartbeat is detected, usually around six weeks of pregnancy.

Among high-income countries, the U.S. spends far more on healthcare, yet it has the highest infant and maternal death rate, a recent study from the Commonwealth Fund found. In the U.S., maternal mortality rates have jumped in recent years, particularly among Black and Native women. Black women had death rates nearly three as high as non-Hispanic white women.

The latest national figures are alarming for Dr. Ayman El-Mohandes, dean of the City University of New York’s Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy, but he said it is far more alarming that the U.S. has been unable to significantly reduce its mortality rate below what it was in 2000, when 6.89 out of 1,000 births resulted in a baby dying in its first year. Since 2000, infant deaths in the U.S. only declined by one per 1,000 births.

The American infant mortality rate of 5.6 per 1,000 births is about three times as high as Norway's, which El-Mohandes said is notable.

“We need to know who we are comparing ourselves to,” El-Mohandes said, “and what infant mortality can look like.”

The U.S. has put spacecraft on Mars in the past two decades, El-Mohandes said. He hopes the country puts equal emphasis on reducing the number of babies who die before their first birthday.

 
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They say they don't have money for high speed railways and subways, but they have the money to support hundreds military bases all over the world. They say that don't have the money to provide adequate medical service, but they have the money to give to Ukraine and Israel to wage wars.

It's not about the money, it's about the design of the system. The US healthcare system is dysfunctional and is notorious in other countries for being extremely wasteful. In Singapore, our politicians love to point at the US as a boogeyman and say that spending more doesn't necessarily mean better outcomes.

Intelligent design of the system and policies is much more important than blindly throwing money at the problem.

The US already spends 17.8% of its GDP on healthcare, while it spends 3.5% of its GDP on the military. If they don't reform their system, they can close all their military bases and channel the funds towards healthcare and it still wouldn't help much.

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The US spends almost twice as much as other OECD countries, and yet it comes out bottom or near the bottom in many important health metrics. They are even lagging behind China in health metrics such as life expectancy and infant mortality rates.

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If they can spend as efficient and effectively as Singapore, they can save up to 13% of their GDP. That would be enough to fix their budget deficits, infrastructure, education etc and still maintain a budget surplus.

But I have doubts that that the US can reform their healthcare system. Their political system isn't designed to have major overhauls of systems in the country (for good or for the worse).
 
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