Nationwide Premature Birth Report Gives States Grades For Premature Births

By Alice Carver
17:00, November 12th 2008
24 votes
Vote this story
Nationwide Premature Birth Report Gives States Grades For Premature Births

Each year, more than 530,000 babies are born before 37 full weeks of gestation, statistics show. About one in eight births in the U.S. is premature. Sixty percent of babies born at 26 weeks of gestation have long-term disabilities, such as chronic lung disease, deafness and neurodevelopmental problems.

Preterm delivery is the leading cause of infant mortality and yet researchers and doctors don’t know what causes it. Premature babies have a higher risk of respiratory problems, neurological diseases, and the risk of early childhood mortality is up to seven times higher for preemies than for babies born at full term with normal birth weight.

According to the first nationwide Premature Birth Report Card, seventeen states earned an F from the advocacy group and there were no As among the grades. The U.S. received a D overall on the March of Dimes’ first state by state report released today.

One state, Vermont, earned a B and ranked at the top with a rate of 9%. The cutoff for an A and the government’s “Healthy People 2010” goal was a preterm birth rate of 7.6% or less.

Eight states received Cs and 23 states received Ds.

In addition to providing state rankings, the March of Dimes report card also analyzes the rates of factors that contribute to premature birth. Risk factors for premature birth include: smoking among mothers-to-be, absence of health insurance for that same group, pregnancy depression.

“Many factors go into both a state's and a nation's premature birth rate,” said Ronald S. Gibbs, MD, a volunteer and medical-expert spokesman for the March of Dimes.

However, the group said there are some solutions that are at hand and some steps that can be done in order to lower the premature birth rate. Among them: increased federal spending for prematurity prevention medical research, expanded access to health coverage for childbearing-age women, smoking cessation programs for mothers-to-be. Pregnant women who have had a previous episode of preterm birth should get weekly shots of the hormone progesterone starting at 16 to 20 weeks' gestation. Studies have shown that this treatment can reduce preterm birth risk by up to one third.

Also, treating pregnancy depression might be an effective way to help prevent these premature births. Research has shown that after taking other risk factors into account (such as mother’s age, education level, and whether the woman had a preterm baby in the past), women with less severe depressive symptoms have a 60 percent higher risk of a premature birth compared to women without “significant” depressive symptoms.

Given this situation, prematurity still remains a major national concern. Infant deaths in the United States continue to surpass other developed countries despite a bigger amount of money spent on health care. Premature birth and low birth weight are two main factors that contribute to more than two thirds of infant deaths.



© 2007 - 2009 - eFluxMedia
dotclear

Other News in

Engineered Goat Produces Medicine

The progress made by medicine in the latest years has been truly fantastic, as new technologies and drugs emerged, new ways of conducting surgeries have become available, but some developments just...

Bird Flu Could Be Resistant To Drugs

Bird Flu Could Be Resistant To Drugs

Scientists doubt if anti-viral medication would have any effect in the case of a bird flu pandemic, as the virus is known for its extraordinary ability to mutate very fast. University of Colorado at...

An Early C-Section Is Definitely Not The Best Choice

An Early C-Section Is Definitely Not The Best Choice

According to a new study, early elective cesarean sections pose serious risks to newborns. The study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine , found that babies delivered via a scheduled...

Gene Predicts the Likelihood of ALL Recurrence

Gene Predicts the Likelihood of ALL Recurrence

  Acute lymphoblastic leukemia or ALL is the most common type of cancer in children affecting about one in 30,000 each year. Current drugs for the disease have put the cure rates close to 80...

Teens Tackle Risky Behaviour on MySpace

Teens Tackle Risky Behaviour on MySpace

Many teens and college students enjoy talking about sex, drugs and violence on MySpace or Facebook, a new study shows. But they are disposed to change their risky behaviour if they are given the...

dotclear
Latest videos in Health
Plastic Bags Help to Save...
Nuclear knuckles
Restoring the pee-h balance
Bird flu alert in Hong Kong
Ireland in pork product alert

dotclear
Health You are here: Health
» Science   » Health   
E-mail To A Friend Print RSS Text size: Decrease font size Increase font size
dotclear
dotclear
dotclear
Most Popular in Health
UAMS Scientists To Begin Testing Breast Cancer VaccineUAMS Scientists To Begin Testing Breast Cancer Vaccine

» read full story
dotclear

Interested In This Topic?

News Alert will keep you informed. Find out more.
dotclear
Photos Gallery
dotclear
Today's Latest News
Committee backs impeachment of governor over Obama's Senate seat

» read full story
dotclear