Utah reduces preemie births
March of Dimes notes 10.9% rate for '08, gives state 'C' grade
While Utah received a better grade this year than last on its rate of premature births, it still gets only a "C" from the March of Dimes for work to reduce the number of babies born too early.
Officials released their second annual report card at a news conference Tuesday, noting 10.9 percent of all live births — some 6,000 Utah babies — were premature in 2008, putting them at greater risk for immediate and long-term health problems.
The majority of Utah's premature births occur in "late preterm"term births — that's where the majority of preterm births occur," said Dr. Bob Silver, chief of the division of maternal-fetal medicine at the University of Utah School of Medicine.
"Many health systems have been implementing quality-improvement programs. These efforts have helped reduce early C-sections, as well as the rates of preterm birth. However, we can do even better," he said.
The "C" grade also came after a reduction in the number of childbearing-age women who smoke, as well as a reduction in the number of women that age who are uninsured.
Dr. David Sundwall, executive director of the Utah Department of Health, lauded state programs like Baby Your Baby, the Utah Birth Defects Network and the Pregnancy RiskLine, all of which seek to promote prenatal health and provide data to help prevent future birth defects.
"These are incredibly important and successful programs that really impact all Utahns," he said. "When babies are born too early, they can suffer medical problems that cost their families and the state dearly. So I'm very proud to see this improvement on our report card."
March of Dimes spokesman Stephen McDonald said only a small percentage of Utah preemies are born from 22 to 30 weeks gestation, and the rate of those births "has remained fairly constant over time," while the rate of late preterm births had been rising for more than a decade before dropping in the past year.
Hospital officials said that every day, the newborn intensive-care unit at University Hospital sees one or two new admissions, McDonald said, noting the emotional toll on families and the babies themselves is difficult to grasp, in addition to the costs the tiny patients incur.
The grades given by the March of Dimes are based on the federal government's "Healthy People 2010" goal that, by next year, no more than 7.6 percent of all live births should be premature. "This is based on how close states are to that goal," he said.Vermont was the only state to score a "B" in the March of Dimes study — the highest grade among the states in the report.term birth by the March of Dimes shows the U.S. and Canada follow only to Africa in the number of premature births each year. It said the rate of preterm birth in the U.S. has increased 36 percent in the past 25 years.
McDonald said a few of the possible reasons are: a rise in pregnancies in women over age 35; growing use of assisted reproductive technologies, leading to a higher number of twins and multiple births; and the rise in late preterm births "where women try to select a due date before the baby is full-term. That's not much of an option in other nations."
e-mail: carrie@desnews.com
Comments
- Softball complex renamed for Miller 8:34 p.m.
- News briefs 8:31 p.m.
- Salt Lake Co. joins jail-funding plan 8:27 p.m.
- Ban on teens driving with cell phones? 8:23 p.m.
- Business-conditions up in January 8:20 p.m.
- Toyota's damage control 8:19 p.m.
- Google gets social in face-off 8:17 p.m.
- Real estate market unclear in 2010 8:17 p.m.
- Japan Airlines spurns Delta offer 8:16 p.m.
- Addys ceremony Feb. 25 at the U. 8:16 p.m.
- High school players commit to BYU
- Utah Jazz Ironmen
- LDS veggie program helps Bolivians
- Teacher merit pay debated
- SLC's City Creek moves ahead
- Utahn's 'Caveman Diet' catching on
- MWC race shaping 'Survivor' style
- 15-month-old Rachel Toone dies
- Kaman, not Boozer, on All-Star team
- Cougars hope for fast rebound
- Teacher merit pay debated
187 - UNLV bombs BYU into loss
185 - Why do they hate us? Try asking
155 - Countering attacks on LDS scholarship
155 - Letters: Tea Party hypocrites
119 - Rally in opposition to benefit cuts
90 - White House mocks Sarah Palin
87 - High school players commit to BYU
83 - Utah football alters schedule
80 - Let's talk college hoops
78
The Kepler probe, launched 11 months ago to hunt for Earthlike worlds...
Interesting and entertaining observations of the Utah Legislature.
I'm so sorry for the loss of these to beautiful children. May the heavenly...
This is ten years too late for me. But better late than never for the sake...
Once again a non existent problem created by the anti-government...
As a Ute fan, what is the intent of long blogs??? To prove a point (I would...
How can you say that a guy who makes it to the Super Bowl as a STARTER in his...
Aggies are peaking at the right time. USU never gets a fair shake in the...
I find it interesting that so many people think only custodial parents can be...
@We are a democratic republic "Everyone in this COUNTRY has freedom of...
I'm glad that I live in Calif. Drew Brees, Tim Tebow, and many other...
I cannot begin to imagine the pain and sorrow experienced by this family. My...




You can be the first to comment on this story.