Annals of Epidemiology
Volume 11, Issue 3 , Pages 208-212, April 2001

Postneonatal Mortality in Alabama:

Why No Progress in the 90s?

  • Louie Albert Woolbright, PhD

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress reprint requests to: Louie Albert Woolbright, Ph.D., Alabama Department of Public Health, Center for Health Statistics, P.O. Box 5625, Montgomery, AL 36103–5625

Alabama Department of Public Health, Center for Health Statistics, Montgomery, AL USA.

Received 24 May 1999; received in revised form 28 June 2000; accepted 7 September 2000.

Abstract 

PURPOSE: To examine the factors associated with postneonatal mortality.

METHODS: Logistic regression was used to examine the effects of various variables on postneonatal mortality in Alabama.

RESULTS: The most important predictor of postneonatal mortality was birth weight. Social and economic variables were also important in explaining postneonatal mortality.

CONCLUSIONS: Reductions in postneonatal mortality may require closer case management of low birth weight neonatal survivors. Survival of these infants creates a cohort at risk of postneonatal mortality. Many of these low birth weight infants are born into an environment where their mothers' parenting potential is compromised by youth and poverty. This may be responsible for the failure to reduce postneonatal mortality and explain its increasing proportion of infant deaths; deaths may be being postponed from the neonatal to the postneonatal period.

Keywords:  Postneonatal Mortality, Infant Mortality, Low Birth Weight

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PII: S1047-2797(00)00212-X

Annals of Epidemiology
Volume 11, Issue 3 , Pages 208-212, April 2001