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Who's Caring for Our Babies?

What expecting black mothers need to know about infant mortality.

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May 19, 2008-- Last year I came across a New York Times story about increasing levels of infant mortality among African Americans. It stated that deaths of children in the first year of life, on the decline in previous years, were rising steadily. A few months later, another New York Times article discussed the declining rate of infant mortality around the world, primarily in African and South Asian countries, as a result of international campaigns . As a mother of two who has been blessed never to have experienced the tragic loss of a child, I asked myself, "Who is caring for our African-American babies?"  

The term "infant mortality" refers to babies born alive who die before their first birthday. The cause of death can range from complications of premature birth and low birth weight to SIDS (sudden infant death syndrome) and accidents. Infant mortality has declined in the U.S. over the past 50 years, but our country still has the second worst newborn rate in the developed world. And the rates for infant death among African Americans remain alarmingly high.  

In 2004, the national average was 6.78 infant deaths per 1,000 live births.But for African Americans, the rate was double that—13 infant deaths per 1,000 live births—and in some states, rates among African Americans were as high as 20 deaths per 1,000 live births. 

This disparity is not simply related to poverty. Yes, being poor is hazardous to your health and increases the risk of troubled pregnancies and births. But statistics show that infant mortality strikes African Americans at higher rates regardless of socioeconomic status. In fact, a highly educated, middle-to upper-middle-class black woman still has a greater risk than an uneducated, poor white woman of losing her babybefore the baby's first birthday.  

Just as puzzling, the disparity may be not just about race, but also about culture. Studies show that African immigrants in the United States have the same infant mortality rate as the general U.S. population. But after one generation, their rates plummet to the level of other African Americans.   

Medical experts are hard at work to understand racial and cultural disparities in infant mortality. The most obvious area of research is around the availability of quality health care. But there are likely other factors at play as well. Some studies have shown that African-American babies are more likely to sleep in the same bed as their parents and older siblings, increasing the risk of death from rollover suffocation. There is also some evidence that African-American women have less frequent prenatal carein their first and second trimesters, relying more on care and advice from relatives than from doctors. Scientists are also beginning to look at the role of stress as it relates to race, and its impact on having healthy babies.  

The impact of these deaths is monumental. Our country is losing important contributors to our society. We need the heart, souls and minds of African-American children to continue to push America to be the country it must be. And the pain and suffering that women and families endure as a result of losing their children is devastating. When a woman is pregnant, she bonds with that baby in her womb. Her family prepares to receive the new life. The pain, sorrow, depression and helplessness of losing a child affects not just the woman, but also her entire family and her community.  

As scientists, doctors and social workers continue their work to try to determine the root causes of this terrible disparity, I have committed to working with the Office of Minority Health in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to remind women that, as vessels of the future, we must take care of ourselves. Healthy women create healthy babies, which create healthy communities. With the fast pace of life, we can all get caught up in our day-to-day lives and forget one of our most important contributions as women. We can also forget that pregnancy and childbirth are incredible biological and medical phenomena that should not be underestimated or taken for granted.

There are some simple things we can do to better support our babies, our families and our communities:  

Yes, we can do everything right and still suffer a tragic outcome. But doing things right will greatly reduce the chances that our babies die. Black babies in America matter. Black children matter. We can do something to make sure healthy babies prosper in America. Spreading the word is at least a start.            

Tonya Lewis Lee is an attorney, producer and author based in New York.

Also on The Root:

Tonya Lewis Lee's "What Did You Do Today, Mommy?", Melissa Harris-Lacewell's "Behinda Coretta's Veil: Black Women and the Burdens of Loss", and "The Face of Fistula" by Veronica Chambers. 

Discuss:

Who's Caring for Our Babies?

Member Comments

  • Posted By:
    UWorlds1 at 05/22/2008 11:00:41 AM
    Comment:
    uworlds1:

    not only black babies matter, everyone matters...but as Blacks we need to recognize the effects our lifestyle has on our bodies. All the drama we inflect on each other is devistating. And for what purpose?

    We as Blacks need to start loving each other, and ourselves.
  • Posted By:
    BaggyPantsDevil at 05/21/2008 3:27:09 PM
    Comment:
    You can follow links to the US Department of Health and Human Services to the Center for Disease Control to see the infant mortality rates for more demographic groups. Native Americans have a rate of 8.45 per 1000 live births which is a distant second to the 13.6 per 1000 live births for African Americans.
  • Posted By:
    QueenXandra at 05/20/2008 3:53:48 PM
    Comment:
    Obviously the article is focused on the disparity in infant mortality...did you not read it? Black babies are more likely to die in their first year of life than other babies in this country. Nowhere does the article say "only black babies matter" so refrain from such ignorant comments please. I am curious about the infant mortality rates among native american babies...I would not be surprised if the rates of death are even higher than those in the black community.
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