Infant Mortality: How Racism May Contribute To Higher Rates In The African-American Community

Posters with data about the Best Babies Zone in Phoenix are displayed on the wall at a town hall meeting hosted by South Phoenix Healthy Start on Sept. 20. (Photo by Andrea Jaramillo Valencia/Cronkite News)

By Andrea Jaramillo Valencia

PHOENIX – Immediately after Magan Carter’s baby was born, doctors put feeding tubes down his throat and hooked him up to an oxygen machine. He couldn’t breathe and had to use a feeding tube. Amari was in an incubator for three months.

 Carter’s pregnancy lasted 26 weeks and four days. As an African-American woman, the odds were against her.

Across the United States, African-American women are more likely than any other race to give birth to premature babies, which is the leading cause of infant death for that population. Black babies are also more likely than other race to die before their first birthday. On average, Arizona has had higher infant mortality rates among African-Americans than the national rates from 2006 to 2014, according to data from the Arizona Department of Health Services.

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