From Deseret News archives:

Preterm births on the rise in U.S.

Utahns provided much of the report's data

Published: Friday, July 14, 2006 9:13 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
The researchers used a data cohort of 23,631 babies born in Utah from 1998-2000, all covered by Intermountain Healthcare's health insurance. And it tracked those infants through age 5, using all the data on their medical costs, to figure out what the national medical cost would be — $15.9 billion of the $26 billion total. Then they figured out the costs of maternal delivery, early intervention services, special ed costs for children growing up disabled, lost productivity and other factors.

It's the first study to look so far beyond the initial cost of care. And it's an "absolute floor — the bare minimum costs," said Norman Waitzman, associate professor in the department of economics at the University of Utah, who served on the panel and headed the cost analysis.

Besides the Intermountain data, researchers drew on a study from the Atlanta area to come up with estimates on the lifetime cost of developmental disabilities, which occur more frequently among children who were born too soon. They considered only four developmental challenges: mental retardation, cerebral palsy, hearing loss and vision loss, looking at special education costs, lost productivity and medical costs beyond age 5. Costs of other disabilities were not calculated.

Story continues below
The study has drawn a lot of attention to reproduction assistance such as fertility treatments or in vitro fertilization because women are more likely to have multiple births with such methods. And multiple births confer increased risk of premature delivery. On the other hand, multiple births represent only 10 percent of preterm births, the report says. But if you are one of the women having twins, there's a 61.7 percent they are born early, while 97.2 percent of triplets and other "multiples" are born preterm.

Society needs to become a little more stressed about the issue, Iams said. "Isn't it wonderful what they can do with these little babies," the public says, according to Iams. "That translates into it's no big deal to have my baby born early and, of course, it is a big deal."

The report is available online at www.nap.edu.


E-MAIL: lois@desnews.com

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image
Deseret Morning News graphic

previousnext

Latest comments

I find it interesting that many of the same people who say that we can't...

Cougs begin bowl preparations

None of these teams is going to be easy. They all have fine football...

Max Hall issues apology

Max, no apology was necessary, but the apology was polically correct. If...

Very good piece of writing, Amy. You summarized what many of us have been...

U. eyes bowl for redemption

How is a top 25 finish make Utah a top twenty team? I think what the poster...

Max Hall issues apology

90% of the BYU & Utah fans have class, and Hall knows it. If you don't...

This might be my favorite article I've ever read from the Deseret News. Kudos.

Y. student vanished in China

Thank you for not giving up and don't give up now brother and sister...

Child prostitutes don't get help

Dr. Lois Lee's work with children who are victims of child sexual...

Look at the preview for Pixar's "Up". The whole move is summarized in...

Advertisements