J
Am Med Womens Assoc 1995 Sep-Oct;50(5):187-93
Framing the debate: can prenatal care help to reduce the black-white
disparity in infant mortality?
Rowley DL.
Division of Reproductive Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Prenatal care has been identified as necessary to reducing the disparity
in infant mortality between black and white infants. The purpose of this
paper is to review determinants of the disparity and describe the contribution
that prenatal care can make to modifying those determinants, biologic
or social. When examined by birthweight categories, 25% of the disparity
is due to excess deaths among normal birthweight infants (> or = 2500
g); 13% is due to excess deaths among moderate low birthweight infants
(1500-2499g); and 62% of the disparity is due to excess deaths among very
low birthweight infants. Normal birthweight black infants have higher
rates of death due to infections, injuries, and sudden infant death syndrome.
Very low birthweight black infants account for the increasing disparity
in infant mortality. Social determinants of the disparity in infant mortality
include the effects of poverty and the accompanying problems of limited
access to health care services, preventive care, and good nutrition. Prenatal
care may reduce the disparity by using both high-risk and population-based
prevention strategies. This combination of strategies would identify and
treat medically high-risk women before delivery and provide preventive
care to all women, regardless of their risk status. Although both strategies
have a potential for producing modest reductions, neither has proved to
be effective.
Publication Types: Review; Review, Tutorial
PMID: 7499711 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]