Department of Family Medicine, University of Virginia, School of Medicine, Charlottesville, VA 22908, USA.
Semin Perinatol. 2011 Aug;35(4):209-20. doi: 10.1053/j.semperi.2011.02.018.
Racial and ethnic disparities in infant mortality in the United States seem to defy all attempts at elimination. Despite national priorities to eliminate these disparities, black infants are 2.5 times more likely to die in infancy compared with non-Hispanic white infants. This disparity is largely related to the greater incidence among black infants of prematurity and low birth weight, congenital malformations, sudden infant death syndrome, and unintentional injuries. This greater incidence, in turn, is related to a complex interaction of behavioral, social, political, genetic, medical, and health care access factors. Thus, to influence the persistent racial disparity in infant mortality, a highly integrated approach is needed, with interventions adapted along a continuum from childhood through the periods of young adulthood, pregnancy, postpartum and beyond. The content and methodologies of these interventions need to be adapted to the underlying behaviors, social influences, and technology and access issues they are meant to address.
美国婴儿死亡率的种族和民族差异似乎难以消除。尽管国家有优先消除这些差异的目标,但黑人婴儿在婴儿期死亡的可能性是白人婴儿的 2.5 倍。这种差异主要与黑人婴儿中早产和低出生体重、先天性畸形、婴儿猝死综合征和意外伤害的发生率较高有关。这种较高的发生率反过来又与行为、社会、政治、遗传、医疗和获得医疗保健机会等因素的复杂相互作用有关。因此,要想影响婴儿死亡率中持续存在的种族差异,需要采取高度综合的方法,根据从儿童期到青年期、怀孕期、产后及以后的整个连续过程,调整干预措施。这些干预措施的内容和方法需要适应其旨在解决的潜在行为、社会影响以及技术和获取途径问题。