Feature

U.S. preterm birth rate rose slightly in 2015


 

The preterm birth rate in the United States for 2015 increased for the first time in 8 years, according to the March of Dimes.

The national preterm birth rate rose from 9.57% in 2014 to 9.63% last year, earning an overall grade of C on the March of Dimes 2016 Premature Birth Report Card.

Preterm birth rates and March of Dimes grades by state, 2015
Within that 9.63% national rate, there was considerable variation between the states: Vermont (7.3%), Oregon (7.6%), New Hampshire (7.9%), and Washington (8.1%) each earned an A, while Mississippi (13%), Louisiana (12.3%), and Alabama (11.7%) each received an F, according to the report card, which used data from the National Center for Health Statistics.

The March of Dimes also ranked preterm births in the states by racial/ethnic disparity: Maine had the least disparity, followed by New Hampshire and Utah, while Hawaii had the greatest disparity, just ahead of Pennsylvania and Louisiana. Using an average of the 2012-2014 national preterm birth rates, the March of Dimes calculated that Asian/Pacific Islanders had the lowest preterm birth rate at 8.5%, compared with 9% for whites, 9.1% for Hispanics, 10.4% for American Indian/Alaska Natives, and 13.3% for blacks.

The report card shows “that there is an unfair burden of premature birth among specific racial and ethnic groups as well as geographic areas,” Jennifer L. Howse, PhD, president of the March of Dimes, said in a statement. “Babies in this country have different chances of surviving and thriving simply based on the circumstances of their birth.”

Recommended Reading

Congenital Zika syndrome includes range of neurologic abnormalities
MDedge Pediatrics
Zika funding slated for prevention, vaccine development
MDedge Pediatrics
Teen birth rates continue to decline in the United States
MDedge Pediatrics
Reassuring findings on neurodevelopmental outcomes in HIV-exposed children
MDedge Pediatrics
Prenatal SSRI exposure linked to speech, language disorders
MDedge Pediatrics
Number of Zika-infected pregnant women continues to climb
MDedge Pediatrics
Zika increase slows slightly in pregnant women
MDedge Pediatrics
USPSTF gives breastfeeding support a ‘B’ grade
MDedge Pediatrics
United States nears 3,000 Zika-infected pregnancies
MDedge Pediatrics
Prenatal triple ART arrests HIV transmission
MDedge Pediatrics