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    Mortality of US Newborns Higher than in 40 Other Nations

    Babies in the United States have a higher risk of dying during their first month of life than do babies born in 40 other countries, according to a new report.

    Some of the countries that outrank the United States in terms of newborn death risk are South Korea, Cuba, Malaysia, Lithuania, Poland and Israel, according to the study.

    Researchers at the World Health Organization estimated the number of newborn deaths and newborn mortality rates of more than 200 countries over the last 20 years.

    The results show that, while newborn mortality rates have decreased globally over that period, progress to lower these rates has been slow, the researchers said.

    In 2009, an estimated 3.3 million babies died during their first four weeks of life, compared with 4.6 million in 1990, the report found. About 41 percent of all deaths of children under 5 occur in the first month (the neonatal period). Progress to reduce newborn deaths has been particularly slow in countries in Africa, the researchers said.

    Newborn deaths could be reduced by as much as a third with simple preventive measures. And measures taken within hospitals, including providing antibiotics and implementing resuscitation techniques, could reduce deaths by two-thirds, the researchers said.

    "We know that solutions as simple as keeping newborns warm, clean and properly breast-fed can keep them alive," said study researcher Joy Lawn of the Save the Children Foundation, which worked with the WHO on the report. "It isn't that you have to build invasive care units to halve your neonatal mortality."

    More health care workers, including midwives, are needed to teach and implement these lifesaving practices, she said.

    Newborn deaths worldwide

    Statistics on exactly how many babies are dying globally during their first month are lacking. Currently, the United Nations collects annual data on deaths of children under age 5 and children under 1 year old, but not specifically on neonatal deaths.

    In the new study, Lawn and colleagues estimated national neonatal mortality rates from 1990 to 2009. For 38 countries, they made these estimates using information in databases that track births and deaths. But for 155 countries, they had to rely on information from household surveys, and create a statistical model to make their estimates.

    The global neonatal mortality rate decreased 28 percent over the 20 years, from 33.2 deaths per 1,000 live births to 23.9 deaths per 1,000 births, the researchers found.

    "It's good news, but it's not enough," Lawn said. Deaths of children between the ages of 3 and 5 and maternal deaths are going down 30 to 40 percent more quickly than neonatal deaths, Lawn said. The difference may be due in part to a lack of attention, funding and policy changes related to reducing neonatal deaths, Lawn said.

    Preterm delivery, asphyxia (lack of oxygen) and severe infections are the three leading causes of newborn death. These are largely preventable with the right care, the researchers said.

    By country

    In the United States, the drop over the last 20 years was less than the average drop — 26 percent. And the United States dropped from No. 28 to  No. 41 in the rankings of newborn death risk. It is now tied with Qatar, Croatia and United Arab Emirates.

    One of the bigger challenges in the U.S. is complications from preterm birth, Lawn said. The U.S. rate of preterm birth is double that of countries in Europe and Northern Africa, she said. Babies who are born preterm need extra care that is often expensive. While there are few things that can reduce preterm birth, she noted that disadvantaged people in the United States may be less likely to receive proper care for preterm infants.

    Still, the toll of neonatal deaths is much worse in other countries. In Afghanistan, one in 19 babies dies in the first month of life (53 per 1,000 births). Five countries account for more than half of the world's newborn deaths: India, Nigeria, Pakistan, China and Democratic Republic of Congo. India has the most newborn deaths, with 900,000 per year, the researchers said.

    If progress is not made to reduce the number of newborn deaths, the portion of child deaths that occur in the neonatal period is likely to increase in the future, the researchers said.

    "It is essential that national governments, international agencies, and civil society increase attention to systematically preventing and tracking neonatal deaths," the researchers wrote.

    The study is published today (Aug. 30) in the journal PLoS Medicine.

    Pass it on: Newborn death rates have decreased globally, but more needs to be done to lower these rates, experts say.

    This story was provided by MyHealthNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow MyHealthNewsDaily staff writer Rachael Rettner on Twitter @RachaelRettner. Like us on Facebook.

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    128 comments

    • Newt from Aliens  •  8 months ago
      There's a totally different reason for all the baby deaths in India, though.
    • CJ  •  8 months ago
      This is a pretty sad story, meanwhile republicans spout off about how we have the best medical care in the world and how socialized medicine is evil. In this country we do have great medical care, if you have the money. As the income gap grows so does the inequity in the quality of our healthcare system.
    • Sam  •  8 months ago
      This is an important subject. Do the research and educate yourself. Then write to your senators and local news papers. Our medical care is not the best in the world. Wake up America! Do it for your children and your grandchildren. Just count the number of people that you know that can't afford medical insurance and who can't afford to see a doctor. Every year my list gets longer and longer. Many on my list are young, old and middle class. Have you had a family member in the hospital lately? Did you feel safe leaving them alone with the staff knowing that they would get the attention they needed?
    • Saltines for Obama  •  8 months ago
      Another example of the Christian God frowning upon the USA. No other explanation because God IS all-powerful and not even a sparrow can fall without him knowing.
    • SuperG  •  8 months ago
      I know if I was an author that I would sign my work. So why didn't you sign it lt?
    • Imma  •  8 months ago
      The ones they could not kill before birth, they finish off before they can defend themselves. After all, they are all Darwinists and being that, they are also disciples of Survival of the Fittest.
    • unclefess  •  8 months ago
      A lot of the problem in the US, and no doubt other countries is that hospitals are full of sick people. Virtually all hospital patients catch something they didn't come in with. With home birth, mother and child already have antibodies for the germs in their home.

      BTW, Ronald Reagan was the first US President to be born in a hospital.
    • Don  •  8 months ago
      IF you add the numbers from the fact that 1 in 4 kids are killed by their mothers BEFORE birth, what would the percentages be? ABORTION=MURDER.
    • gabeygoat  •  8 months ago
      More awesome news from capitalist based health care!
    • NothingYet  •  8 months ago
      I think this would be as good a reason to eliminate the corporate income tax as any... at least according to the GOP and the tea party.

      :-)
    • B. A. Smith  •  8 months ago
      One thing about studies, polls, and statistics, you can make them mean anything all depending who's doing them.
    • James  •  8 months ago
      Best healthcare system in the world! ( 4 the rich) Come on Republicans lets hit 50 maybe even 100 someday! Go U$A!
    • False Flag  •  8 months ago
      well, look who is breeding the most: ghetto dwellers. any surprise they're not living as long? crack rocks and pistol smoke are hell on a newborn.
      • gabeygoat 8 months ago
        racism still doesn't work. sincerely, nazi germany
    • valerie  •  8 months ago
      And Texas gets near the bottom of this and the elder care also.
      • Garlan 8 months ago
        Lots of illegals does pull the stats down
    • Patrick  •  8 months ago
      Joy Lawn must have read "Lying with Statistics". How do you define a live newborn? In the U.S. after the first breath it's a live baby. In some countries it doesn't count until after 24 hours and in other the first week. Also due to medical care in the U.S. babies are born that would never be a live birth in other countries.
      • Tom 8 months ago
        Actually, it doesn't even have to take a breath in the US. ANY sign off life is sufficient. Even a stillborn can meet the requirement if there are involuntary movements of the body.

        Other countries use other arbitrary criteria, as well. Babies under certain weights aren't considered live births. Babies below a certain length aren't considered live births. Babies born before a certain gestation period, regardless of status, can be considered "lifeless."
      • gabeygoat 8 months ago
        you obviously haven't read the book. like all the repubs who cite Wealth of Nations but never read it, or the Bible, but ignore 90% of it
      • ad v 8 months ago
        Then take a look at all the countries who define a live birth in the same way as does the US. The results still place the USA low in the list!!!
    • Tom  •  8 months ago
      Seriously, Yahoo. Half the comments I've posted are just gone. YOU say they are here, as you show them in "My Comments."

      But try to find them, and no such luck. Honestly...
      • gabeygoat 8 months ago
        probably cause people give them a thumbs down, genius
    • Redwing  •  8 months ago
      Can you really trust the data that comes from Cuba and some of these other countries? I doubt it.
      • Tom 8 months ago
        Actually, I believe you can trust the data. But you have to identify WHICH yard stick they are using.

        They aren't measuring data the same way we do.
      • Tony 8 months ago
        Cuba has good medical care for its citizens and the info comes from the who
      • Tom 8 months ago
        Tony, the information from the WHO is SELF REPORTED.

        And the criteria used is set by the country, not the WHO. So, a baby born alive in the US might be considered still born in Cuba.

        A baby considered alive that then dies in the US, might be considered as having never been born alive in Cuba.

        So, if the US has 1000 live births and six die, that's a rate of six per 1000. But in Cuba, three of those six could be considered stillborn. That leaves them with only 997 births. They have to find three more births, and the odds are those babies will live. So they have a mortality rate of 3 per 1000 live births. Even though they were the exact same babies.
    • Ben H  •  8 months ago
      I think the author of the magazine article must be functionally illiterate. The "study" was an 'Estimate' of which countries are 'Improving'. It first was not a measure, but an estimate. It second was about IMPROVEMENT, if you are already the "gold standard" you will not be able to show much or any improvement. But it is a good story otherwise.
    • Amy  •  8 months ago
      I'm curious what the mortality rate is in the US for babys that are actually full term? How far up the list would that put us? The US tries to save every baby no matter what-which is stupid-mother nature knows whats best- if the baby can't be carried to full term there is usually something wrong with it (not always, but more often than not).
    • A Yahoo! User  •  8 months ago
      Priorities, all gets down to priorities. Parents that want their babies simply don't matter as much as a parent that doesn't. You get folks that donate automatically to defeat abortion (a legal exercise that only profits lawyers and politicians), yet look at a poor pregnant woman with disgust. Either life is precious (each and all), or it isn't. If it is, then that child of a poor immigrant is just as important as your own little prince or princess. If it isn't, then leave the people that want abortions alone. You've shown them your true colors already, they know you're a fraud.
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