Am
J Dis Child 1991 Feb;145(2):194-9
Differences in infant mortality by race, nativity status, and other maternal
characteristics.
Kleinman JC, Fingerhut LA, Prager K.
Division of Analysis, National Center for Health Statistics, Centers
for Disease Control, Hyattsville, Md 20782.
The objective of this study was to examine the effects of nativity status
(native vs foreign born) and other maternal characteristics (age, parity,
education, and marital status) on infant, neonatal, and postneonatal mortality
among white and black mothers. The design of this nonrandomized cohort
study was based on birth and death certificates. The setting involved
live births among US residents (excluding California, Texas, and Washington)
in 1983 and 1984. The participants included white mothers with 4.4 million
births and black mothers with 926,000 births in single deliveries. There
were no interventions. With regard to measurements (the main results),
after adjusting for other risk factors, neonatal mortality risk was 22%
lower among the black foreign-born mothers than among the black native-born
mothers, while among white infants, there was no risk difference by nativity.
Relative risks were more similar for postneonatal mortality, ie, 24% lower
among black foreign-born mothers and 20% lower among white foreign-born
mothers. Combining the several categories of risk factors into three broad
maternal risk groups, there was a near-doubling of black and near-tripling
of white infant mortality rates between the low and high levels of maternal
risk. We concluded that if the infant mortality rate in the low-risk groups
could be achieved by the moderate- and high-risk groups, there would be
a 30% reduction in infant deaths within each race. Since the black infant
mortality rate is twice the white infant mortality rate and black foreign-born
mothers have much lower rates than black native-born mothers, it is likely
that further improvement is possible among black infants.
PMID: 1994686 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]