US among worst in world for infant death
US among worst in world for infant death
By The Associated PressSun Nov 11, 6:32 AM ET
The rate at which infants die in the United States has dropped substantially
over the past half-century [there is the “good news”], but broad
disparities remain among racial groups, and the country stacks up poorly
next to other industrialized nations. [Here comes the HORRIFIC
NEWS…]
In 2004, the most recent year for which statistics are available, roughly seven
babies died for every 1,000 live births before reaching their first birthday,
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says. That was down from
about 26 in 1960.
Babies born to black mothers died at two and a half times the rate of those born
to white mothers, according to the CDC figures.
The United States ranks near the bottom for infant survival rates among
modernized nations. A Save the Children report last year placed the
United States ahead of only Latvia, and tied with Hungary, Malta, Poland
and Slovakia.
The same report noted the United States had more neonatologists and newborn intensive
care beds per person than Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom — but
still had a higher rate of infant mortality than any of those nations.
Doctors and analysts blame broad disparities in access to health care among racial
and income groups in the United States.
Not surprisingly, the picture is far bleaker in poorer countries,
particularly in Africa. A 2005 World Health Organization report found infant
mortality rates as high as 144 per 1,000 births — more than 20 times the U.S. rate — in
Liberia.
