出生缺陷对美国婴儿死亡率的贡献。

Teratology Pub Date : 2002-01-01 DOI:10.1002/tera.90002
Joann Petrini, Karla Damus, Rebecca Russell, Karalee Poschman, Michael J Davidoff, Donald Mattison
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引用次数: 156

摘要

背景:在过去的几十年里,虽然总体婴儿死亡率(IMR)有所下降,但出生缺陷仍然是美国婴儿死亡的主要原因。为了说明这一婴儿死亡率的主要原因如何影响美国人口中的亚组,在国家和州一级对出生缺陷对婴儿死亡率的贡献进行了描述性分析。方法:使用美国国家卫生统计中心1999年的死亡率数据,对出生缺陷特异性imr和出生缺陷导致的婴儿比例死亡率进行描述性分析。1999年,对ICD-10的修改影响了特定原因死亡率的编码方式。汇总1995-1998年各州出生缺陷婴儿死亡统计数据用于各州比较。结果:1999年,出生缺陷占美国婴儿死亡人数的近五分之一。出生缺陷特异性IMRs的差异由母亲种族观察到,与其他种族相比,黑人婴儿的发生率最高。然而,在黑人婴儿中,早产/低出生体重是死亡的主要原因,其次是出生缺陷。各州的出生缺陷死亡率和各州因出生缺陷导致的婴儿死亡比例存在很大差异。结论:出生缺陷仍然是美国婴儿死亡的主要原因,尽管1999年从ICD-9到ICD-10的死亡原因编码更新导致了变化。虽然针对出生缺陷的imr提供了致命出生缺陷的总体情况和对危及生命的异常影响的衡量标准,但它们只代表了出生缺陷影响的一小部分,忽略了那些在婴儿期后存活下来的婴儿和那些在产前与出生缺陷相关的损失。必须优先考虑在各州扩大和支持有效的出生缺陷监测系统,包括围产期的全部结果。然而,在进行这些努力的同时,对这一婴儿死亡主要原因的分析提供了对围产期健康的重要见解,并应继续进行分析,同时对1999年分类的变化进行适当调整。
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Contribution of birth defects to infant mortality in the United States.

Background: While overall infant mortality rates (IMR) have declined over the past several decades, birth defects have remained the leading cause of infant death in the United States. To illustrate how this leading cause of infant mortality impacts subgroups within the US population a descriptive analysis of the contribution of birth defects to infant mortality at the national and state level was conducted.

Methods: Descriptive analyses of birth defects-specific IMRs and proportionate infant mortality due to birth defects were conducted for the US using 1999 mortality data from the National Center for Health Statistics. In 1999, the change to ICD-10 impacted how cause-specific mortality rates were coded. Aggregated 1995-1998 state- birth defects infant death statistics were used for state comparisons.

Results: In 1999, birth defects accounted for nearly 1 in 5 infant deaths in the US. Variation in birth defects-specific IMRs were observed by maternal race with black infants having the highest rates when compared with other race groups. However, among black infants prematurity/low birthweight was the leading cause of death, followed by birth defects. There is substantial variation in state-specific birth defects IMRs and the state-specific proportion of infant deaths due to birth defects.

Conclusions: Birth defects remain the leading cause of infant death in the United States, despite the changes that resulted in 1999 from an update in the coding of cause of death from ICD-9 to ICD-10. While birth defects-specific IMRs provide an overall picture of fatal birth defects and a gauge of the impact of life-threatening anomalies, they represent only a fraction of the impact of birth defects, missing those who survive past infancy and those birth defects related losses in the antepartum period. Expansion and support of effective birth defects monitoring systems in each state that include the full spectrum of perinatal outcomes must be a priority. However, paralleling these efforts, analyses of this leading cause of infant mortality provide critical insight into perinatal health and should continue, with appropriate adjustments for the 1999 classification changes.

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