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March of Dimes: CT Lowered Pre-Term Birth Rate Between 2010, 2011

The state received a "B" on the organizations 2012 Report Card, while the United States received a "C," according to a press release.

Connecticut lowered its preterm birth rate between 2010 and 2011 to 10.1 percent, which reflects a five-year national improvement trend, according to a release sent by the March of Dimes. The organization, however, gave the state another "B" on its 2012 Report Card because the rate wasn't lowered enough.

"Connecticut’s progress means that more babies are being born healthy, excess health care costs are being reduced, and families are being spared the heartache of having a baby born too soon," said Michael Botelho, Chair of the Connecticut Chapter Board of Directors.

Forty states, including Connecticut, saw improvement in their preterm birth rates between 2010 and 2011. On the 2012 Report Card, 16 states got a better grade. Nationwide, the largest declines in preterm birth occurred among babies born at 34 to 36 weeks of pregnancy, but the improvement was across the board. Nationally, every racial and ethnic group benefitted, and the preterm birth rates for babies born at all stages of pregnancy improved.

According to the organization, the rate of late preterm births in Connecticut is 7 percent, the rate of women smoking is 18.4 percent and the rate of uninsured women is 13.9 percent.

The United States again received a “C” on the March of Dimes Report Card.  Grades are based on comparing each state’s and the nation’s 2011 preliminary preterm birth rates with the March of Dimes 2020 goal of 9.6 percent of all live births. The U.S. preterm birth rate is 11.7 percent, a decline of more than 8 percent from the peak of 12.8 percent in 2006.

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FHA Exposed June 18, 2013 at 01:54 pm
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Creeky June 18, 2013 at 08:41 pm
Thomas Paine, good to hear from you. I heard you died, like, a 100 years ago! Anyway, you'reRead More right, but what does it matter? No one attending this meeting is interested in anything balanced. I don't know if you've had much opportunity to spend time in Sandy Hook but, that's a broken community. The emotional level is really, really high. More than anything, these folks have a need to "do something" (rather than address their hurt and seek closure). This is a meeting for people to pour out emotion, and find a common enemy (guns) to blame. There is no debate there. There is nothing for you there. If this is what they need, let them have it. The adversarial approach is bound for failure anyway. People get tired of listening to it, and tired of the threats. Also keep in mind, there are a bunch of these folks that earn their living doing this now (screwed up!) and they need to be very careful in how they manage their publicity to stay within IRS non-profit rules--political action is not community enrichment is not a church--got to keep them separated.
Creeky June 18, 2013 at 08:46 pm
FHA Exposed, you can rest. She turned herself in:Read More http://www.justice.gov/usao/ct/Press2013/20130604.html If you are looking for some comeuppance for those that kept this quiet, and handled what they could out of the public's eye, I wish you success in your endeavors, and the best of luck--I think you'll need it.
FHA Exposed June 18, 2013 at 01:51 pm
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