| Literature DB >> 35204976 |
Abstract
Racial disparities in infant mortality have persisted, despite the overall decline in the United States' overall infant mortality rate (IMR). The overall IMR of the entire United States (5.58 per 1000 live births) population masks significant disparities by race and ethnicity: the non-Hispanic Black population experienced an IMR of 10.8 followed by people from Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander populations at 9.4 and American Indians at 8.2. The non-Hispanic White and Asian populations in the United States have the lowest IMR at 4.6 and 3.6, respectively, as of 2018. A variety of factors that characterize minority populations, including experiences of racial discrimination, low income and education levels, poor residential environments, lack of medical insurance, and treatment at low-quality hospitals, demonstrate strong correlations with high infant mortality rates. Identifying, acknowledging, and addressing these disparities must be performed before engaging in strategies to mitigate them. Social determinants of health play a major role in health disparities, including in infant mortality. The study and implementation of programs to address neighborhood factors, education, healthcare access and quality, economic stability, and other personal and societal contexts will help us work towards a common goal of achieving health equity, regardless of racial/ethnic background.Entities:
Keywords: health disparities; healthcare; infant mortality; newborn care; racial disparities; racism; social determinants of health
Year: 2022 PMID: 35204976 PMCID: PMC8870826 DOI: 10.3390/children9020257
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Children (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9067
Social determinants of health and impact on racial disparity in newborn care and outcomes.
| Social Determinant | Disparities |
|---|---|
| Social and community context | Black individuals are more inclined to experience preterm birth as a result of emotional experiences of racism [ |
| Healthcare access and quality | As of 2019, nearly 20% of the Hispanic population and 11% of the Black population in the United States were uninsured [ |
| Education | Hispanic, American Indian, and Black infants are at the greatest risk for mortality, with these populations having the highest percentages for adults who did not have a high school diploma [ |
| Economic stability | High-income Black households share similar rates of unemployment, educational attainment, poverty, and single-headed households with low-income White households [ |
| Neighborhood and built environment | Neighborhoods that are predominantly Black are characterized as having higher allergen counts as well as pollution levels of almost 1.54 times higher than the overall population [ |