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A Report Card on Children's Health
| Article
# : |
16832 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
Date : |
9 / 1989 |
3,057 Words |
| Author
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Elyse Levine Elyse Levine is an instructor in the Nutrition Communications
Program at Boston University. Her articles on health and
nutrition appear regularly in Health Journal. |
By the end of 1989, a very important report card on children's health will be available to parents worldwide. In 1979, the International Year of the Child, the U.S. surgeon general set health objectives for Americans of all age groups to achieve by 1990. Sadly, the report card recounts that we failed to meet most of these key health objectives for children.
The disturbing paradox is that while medical technology thrives, basic health objectives like reducing infant mortality, reducing injuries, and improving nutrition, have languished. How has this happened? According to some recent national reports, the state of U.S. children's health reflects an ongoing story of "haves and have-nots." More serious health problems are seen in poor non-white children, often dictated by who has access to adequate, and costly, health care. Still, the majority of health problems, from drug and alcohol abuse to teenage pregnancy, cut across social and economic lines.
Making Healthy Babies
The infant mortality rate--a measure of the number of babies who do not reach their first birthday for every thousand infants who do--is a clear reflection of a nation's health. Over the last fifty years, the infant mortality rate dropped sharply in developed countries; but decreases halted during the 1980s. Several developed countries have achieved the lowest possible infant mortality rate, but the United States ranks eighteenth worldwide, lagging behind countries like Ireland, Spain, and Singapore. The U.S. infant mortality rate tells the story of a nation divided: By 1986, the mortality rate for white infants was less than nine deaths per thousand, but the rate
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