Racial differences in leading causes of infant death in the United States
Citations Over Time
Abstract
We used linked birth/infant death records of over 23 million singletons belonging to six birth cohorts (1989-91 and 1995-97) and examined changes in race differentials in the overall and cause-specific infant mortality risks across time in the United States. Results show that infant mortality declined for all races during the time period, with disproportionately greater declines among non-Hispanic American Indians (AIs). Among the leading causes of infant death, declines in mortality from sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) and congenital anomalies contributed the most to the overall decline in infant mortality in the 1995-97 cohorts, compared with the 1989-91 cohorts. Disproportionately greater reductions in mortality resulting from SIDS and congenital anomalies led to more rapid mortality declines among non-Hispanic AIs than for other races. There are disturbing findings that infants of almost every race experienced increases in mortality from newborn affected by maternal complications of pregnancy (maternal complications) and that none of the race groups experienced a significant decline in mortality from disorders resulting from short gestation/low birthweight.
Related Papers
- → Lung tissue concentrations of nicotine in sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS)(2002)50 cited
- → Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) - How to reduce the risk?(2023)1 cited
- Epidemiological comparisons of sudden infant death syndrome with infant apnoea.(1986)
- Biomarkers of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) Risk and SIDS Death -- SIDS Sudden Infant and Early Childhood Death: The Past, the Present and the Future(2018)