Mathews T J, MacDorman Marian F
Division of Vital Statistics, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics, Hyattsville, MD 20782, USA.
Natl Vital Stat Rep. 2007 May 2;55(14):1-32.
This report presents 2004 period infant mortality statistics from the linked birth/infant death data file by a variety of maternal and infant characteristics. The linked file differs from the mortality file, which is based entirely on death certificate data.
Descriptive tabulations of data are presented and interpreted. Excluding rates by cause of death, the infant mortality rate is now published with two decimal places.
The U.S. infant mortality rate was 6.78 infant deaths per 1000 live births in 2004 compared with 6.84 in 2003. Infant mortality rates ranged from 4.67 per 1,000 live births for Asian and Pacific Islander mothers to 13.60 for non-Hispanic black mothers. Among Hispanics, rates ranged from 4.55 for Cuban mothers to 7.82 for Puerto Rican mothers. Infant mortality rates were higher for those infants whose mothers were born in the 50 states and the District of Columbia, were unmarried, or were born in multiple births. Infant mortality was also higher for male infants and infants born preterm or at low birthweight. The neonatal mortality rate declined from 4.63 in 2003 to 4.52 in 2004 while the postneonatal mortality rate was essentially unchanged. Infants born at the lowest gestational ages and birthweights have a large impact on overall U.S. infant mortality. More than one-half (55 percent) of all infant deaths in the United States in 2004 occurred to the 2 percent of infants born at less than 32 weeks of gestation. Still, infant mortality rates for late preterm (34-36 weeks of gestation) infants were three times those for term (37-41 week) infants. The three leading causes of infant death-Congenital malformations, low birthweight, and SIDS-taken together accounted for 45 percent all infant deaths. Results from a new analysis of preterm-related causes of death show that 36.5 percent of infant deaths in 2004 were due to preterm-related causes. The preterm-related infant mortality rate for non-Hispanic black mothers was 3.5 times higher, and the rate for Puerto Rican mothers was 75 percent higher than for non-Hispanic white mothers.
本报告通过一系列孕产妇和婴儿特征展示了2004年期间来自出生/婴儿死亡关联数据文件的婴儿死亡率统计数据。该关联文件与完全基于死亡证明数据的死亡率文件不同。
呈现并解读数据的描述性表格。除按死因计算的比率外,婴儿死亡率现公布至小数点后两位。
2004年美国婴儿死亡率为每1000例活产中有6.78例婴儿死亡,而2003年为6.84例。婴儿死亡率范围从亚太岛民母亲的每1000例活产4.67例到非西班牙裔黑人母亲的13.60例。在西班牙裔中,古巴母亲的比率为4.55例,波多黎各母亲的比率为7.82例。母亲出生在50个州和哥伦比亚特区、未婚或多胞胎出生的婴儿的死亡率更高。男婴以及早产或低体重出生的婴儿的死亡率也更高。新生儿死亡率从2003年的4.63降至2004年的4.52,而后新生儿死亡率基本未变。孕周和出生体重最低的婴儿对美国总体婴儿死亡率有很大影响。2004年美国所有婴儿死亡中超过一半(55%)发生在孕周不足32周出生的2%的婴儿身上。不过,晚期早产(孕周34 - 36周)婴儿的死亡率是足月儿(孕周37 - 41周)的三倍。婴儿死亡的三大主要原因——先天性畸形、低体重和婴儿猝死综合征——合计占所有婴儿死亡的45%。一项关于早产相关死因的新分析结果显示,2004年36.5%的婴儿死亡归因于早产相关原因。非西班牙裔黑人母亲的早产相关婴儿死亡率比非西班牙裔白人母亲高3.5倍,波多黎各母亲的这一比率比非西班牙裔白人母亲高75%。