Too Many African-American Babies Born Too Soon
Reader stats
Article rating
No ratings yet
Reader rating appears publicly after enough eligible article ratings.
Rate this article
Sign in to rate this article.
Overwhelmed by the thought of motherhood, she did not seek out any community resources and had only recently learned about our practice. She was complaining of abdominal pain when I saw her. Her ultrasound confirmed that she was 28 weeks. The baby weighed slightly over two pounds. I diagnosed preterm labor and sent her to the hospital for care. She delivered a live baby girl one week later. Although the baby was premature, our interventions, including medication and excellent care for the newborn, allowed her to take the baby home about eight weeks later.
Preterm birth is a serious and costly health problem, and unfortunately African-American babies have the highest preterm birth rate of any other racial or ethic group. African-American women are more than one and a half times as likely to have a preterm baby compared to white women. The reasons for these differences are still under investigation, and actions to reduce the preterm birth rate in this population are underway.
In Newark, the March of Dimes, local health officials, and Johnson & Johnson launched Healthy Babies are Worth the Wait®, a community-based program to help give more babies a healthy start in life.
The Healthy Babies are Worth the Wait program is a preterm birth prevention initiative. It provides education for pregnant women, health care providers and the community about the serious long term health consequences of an early birth, the risk factors for preterm birth and strategies for reducing that risk.
There are things a woman can do to help give her baby a healthy start in life and reduce her risk of having a preterm baby.
These are five of the ways to increase the chances of having a healthy baby:
1. Arrange a preconception check-up with a health care provider before getting pregnant to make sure you are in the best heath possible.
2. Seek early prenatal care. All women should visit with their health care provider as soon as pregnancy is recognized so that their pregnancy can be managed. Women who have already had a preterm infant may be candidates for interventions that can reduce the chance of having another premature baby.
3. Manage your medical problems. Women with diabetes, hypertension or other medical problems should plan their pregnancies. Work with your doctor to first get these conditions under control before attempting pregnancy.
4. Manage medications. Women who take medications should make sure that any medication they are taking is safe in pregnancy.
5. Develop healthy habits. Avoid stress, tobacco, alcohol or the use of other illicit drugs. Take a multivitamin with folic acid every day to reduce the chance of birth defects. Eat properly and get to a healthy weight.
Preterm birth is the leading cause of newbo
death. Babies who survive an early birth face an increased risk of life-long health consequences, such as breathing problems, cerebral palsy, learning disabilities and other conditions. Every week of pregnancy is crucial to a newborn's health, and babies do much more than gain weight during the last few weeks of pregnancy.
Important organs, such as the lungs and brain, are still developing. In fact, at 35 weeks of pregnancy, a baby's brain weighs only two-thirds of what it will weigh at 39 to 40 weeks. Through education, interventions, and strengthening community resources, the Healthy Babies are Worth the Wait program aims to reduce preterm birth. My hope is that African American moms such as the one that I described - and indeed, all moms - have healthy full-term infants. Certainly, "Healthy Babies are Worth the Wait."
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
How Sales Feedback Helps Appointment Partners Qualify Leads Better
The Feedback Loop: How Sales Insights Sharpen the Edge of Appointment Setting In the fast-paced world of modern business, the bridge between a potential interest and a closed deal is often built by an appointment partner. These specialists act as the gatekeepers of a salespersonâs calendar, ensuring that every minute spent in a meeting is a minute spent with a high-potential prospect. However, this bridge is not a static structure. It is a living, breathing process that req
March 11, 2026
Article
How Automation and Outsourced Appointment Setting Are Shaping the Future of Solar Sales
The Quiet Revolution in Sunlight: How Automation and Outsourcing Are Redrawing the Solar Sales Map For years, the image of solar sales was a familiar one: a determined representative, clipboard in hand, going door-to-door under the sun they hoped to harness. It was a model built on human persistence and personal interaction. Today, that landscape is undergoing a profound and quiet transformation, not by replacing the human element, but by reimagining its focus. The future of
January 7, 2026
Article
Building A Scalable Flutter App with Microservices Architecture
Introduction In this digital era where everything is getting faster and smoother, the app is like a must-have tool in the corporate world to run the business in a very flexible, scalable, and future-ready manner. Among a lot of tech choices, Flutter garnered success because of its availability to write one code and use it on both Android and iOS and yet have an elegant, high-performance, and quick app. At first glance, combining Flutter with the microservices concept becomes
September 17, 2025
Article
Top 5 Benefits of Using React Native for Cost-Effective Mobile App Development
Mobile applications act as a link between companies and their clients. Yet, creating apps for both iOS and Android can be costly. Many companies hesitate to move forward because of the high cost of native app development. This is where React Native changes the game. React Native allows businesses to build powerful and reliable apps without overspending. The Grey Space Computing team uses this framework to help the clients. We help in reducing costs and speeding up the app la
September 12, 2025