Pediatrics
1999 Dec;104(6):1229-46
Annual summary of vital statistics--1998.
Guyer B, Hoyert DL, Martin JA, Ventura SJ, MacDorman MF, Strobino DM.
Department of Population and Family Health Sciences, Johns Hopkins School
of Hygiene and Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA.
Most vital statistics indicators of the health of Americans were stable
or showed modest improvements between 1997 and 1998. The preliminary birth
rate in 1998 was 14.6 births per 1000 population, up slightly from the
record low reported for 1997 (14.5). The fertility rate, births per 1000
women aged 15 to 44 years, increased 1% to 65.6 in 1998, compared with
65.0 in 1997. The 1998 increases, although modest, were the first since
1990, halting the steady decline in the number of births and birth and
fertility rates in the 1990s. Fertility rates for total white, non-Hispanic
white, and Native American women each increased from 1% to 2% in 1998.
The fertility rate for black women declined 19% from 1990 to 1996, but
has changed little since 1996. The rate for Hispanic women, which dropped
2%, was lower than in any year for which national data have been available.
Birth rates for women 30 years or older continued to increase. The proportion
of births to unmarried women remained about the same at one third. The
birth rate for teen mothers declined again for the seventh consecutive
year, and the use of timely prenatal care (82.8%) improved for the ninth
consecutive year, especially for black (73.3%) and Hispanic (74.3%) mothers.
The number and rate of multiple births continued their dramatic rise;
the number of triplet and higher-order multiple births jumped 16% between
1996 and 1997, accounting, in part, for the slight increase in the percentage
of low birth weight (LBW) births. LBW continued to increase from 1997
to 1998 to 7.6%. The infant mortality rate (IMR) was unchanged from 1997
to 1998 (7.2 per 1000 live births). The ratio of the IMR among black infants
to that for white infants (2.4) remained the same in 1998 as in 1997.
Racial differences in infant mortality remain a major public health concern.
In 1997, 65% of all infant deaths occurred to the 7.5% of infants born
LBW. Among all of the states, Maine, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire
had the lowest IMRs. State-by-state differences in IMR reflect racial
composition, the percentage LBW, and birth weight-specific neonatal mortality
rate for each state. The United States continues to rank poorly in international
comparisons of infant mortality. Expectation of life at birth increased
slightly to 76.7 years for all gender and race groups combined. Death
rates in the United States continue to decline, including a drop in mortality
from human immunodeficiency virus. The age-adjusted death rate for suicide
declined 6% in 1998; homicide declined 14%. Death rates for children from
all major causes declined again in 1998. A large proportion of childhood
deaths, however, continue to occur as a result of preventable injuries.
PMID: 10585972 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]