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Last modified: Thursday, August 7, 2008 11:41 AM CDT
Warren above average
By JUSTIN STORY, The Daily News, jstory@bgdailynews.com/783-3256
A report released Wednesday revealed that Kentucky has a higher rate of
preterm births, teen births and low birthweight babies than the national
average, but Warren County has experienced lower numbers than the state in
all those categories.
“The Right Start for America’s Newborns,” an
annual report released by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, ranks all 50
states and the 50 largest U.S. cities for their rates of teen births, low
birthweight babies (defined as babies weighing less than 5.5 pounds at
birth), preterm births, births to mothers who smoked during pregnancy,
births to mothers with less than 12 years of education, births to women
with late or no prenatal care, births to unmarried women and teen births
to women who are already mothers.
Data for each of those statistics
is included dating back to 1990, and the state and city rankings in each
category are based on 2005 births, the most recent year covered by the
study.
Kentucky ranked 46th for preterm births in 2005, with only
four states registering a higher rate than the 15.2 percent of babies born
before 28 weeks gestation in the state.
Warren County, meanwhile,
saw a 12 percent rate of preterm births between 2003-05.
In 2005,
12.1 percent of babies born in Kentucky were born to teen mothers, ranking
40th among all states, compared to 3.4 percent babies born in Warren
County between 2003-05.
In the area of low birthweight babies, 7
percent of Warren County babies born between 2003-05 weighed less than 5.5
pounds, outperforming the state rate of 9.1 percent and the national rate
of 8.2 percent. Kentucky ranked 39th in low birthweight
babies.
Also, the report shows that 26 percent of babies were born
in Kentucky in 2005 to mothers who smoked during pregnancy, whereas only
19 percent of babies in Warren County from 2003-05 were born to women who
reported smoking during pregnancy.
Tara Grieshop-Goodwin, deputy
director of Kentucky Youth Advocates, said the rates of preterm and
low-weight births have increased both in the state and nationwide over the
course of the past five years.
“There are a lot of different
factors that go into that,” Grieshop-Goodwin said. “Are women getting in
to see their doctors and health care providers and getting the appropriate
care? Also, there are physical stressors at work and environmental issues
in some communities.”
Grieshop-Goodwin said the incidence of women
who smoked during pregnancy, which ranks well above the national rate of
10.7 percent, relates directly to the rates of unhealthy birth outcomes in
the state.
“A baby with a low birth weight is more susceptible to
health problems throughout its life and 34 percent less likely to graduate
from high school,” Grieshop-Goodwin said.
Alex Soriano, a
neonatologist for The Medical Center, said Warren County may be
outperforming the state rate for poor birth outcomes due to greater access
to health care services, as well as a smaller portion of residents living
in poverty compared to many other counties.
More importantly,
according to Soriano, the county’s rates may be attributed in part to the
educational resources available to parents-to-be.
“It all boils
down to education, especially on how to lead a healthier lifestyle during
pregnancy,” Soriano said.
Tammy Drake, coordinator of the Health
Access Nurturing Development Services program for the Barren River
District Health Department, leads efforts to educate first-time parents on
lifestyle changes they need to make during and after pregnancy.
The
16 people in the district who make up the HANDS program make weekly visits
to first-time parents during their pregnancy and for up to two years after
the baby is born.
“What we do with mothers is talk about the
importance of keeping prenatal appointments, the changes the body goes
through and we show them what exactly happens to your baby when you smoke
during the pregnancy,” said Drake, whose program serves 200 families in
the Barren River district.
Drake said that while she encounters
teen parents as part of the program, the majority of the first-time
parents she visits are between 20 and 24 years of age.
In
discussing smoking with first-time parents, she goes into the detrimental
effects on the health of the baby caused by smoking, including low birth
weight and various physical and developmental disabilities.
“I’d
like to see Kentucky come up in these (rankings) and hopefully if we keep
educating and making parents aware that will happen,” Drake
said.
STATE RANKINGS 2005
Percent low birthweight:
9.1 percent, ranked 39th
Preterm births: 15.2 percent,
46th
Total teen births: 12.1 percent, 40th
Births to mothers
who smoked while pregnant: 26.1 percent, 36th
County rates all
births 2003-05
Percent low birthweight: Allen 9%, Barren 10%,
Butler 8%, Edmonson 7%, Logan 14%, Simpson 9%,
Warren
7%
Preterm: Allen 12%, Barren 14%, Butler 10%, Edmonson 13%, Logan
10%, Simpson 14%, Warren 12%
Teen births: Allen 48 per 1,000
births; Barren 60/1,000; Butler 51/1,000; Edmonson 51/1,000; Logan
61/1,000; Simpson 79/1,000; Warren 24/1,000
Births to mothers who
smoked while pregnant: Allen, 34%, Barren 26%, Butler 31%, Edmonson 33%,
Logan 35%, Simpson 27%, Warren 19%
Source: Annie E. Casey
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