What is the test of a good and strong society?
Jon Terry is the NHSA Government Relations Consultant and President of Capitol Youth Strategies LLC.
“I believe the test of a good and strong society is how we look after the most vulnerable, the most frail and the poorest. That’s true in good times, but it’s even more true in difficult times.”
This quote from David Cameron, Prime Minister of the UK, immediately came to mind when I was asked why it is important to raise awareness about infant mortality. Regardless of the economic climate or the state of the current fiscal mess in Washington, D.C., we have a responsibility to care for the most vulnerable in our society. At the top of the ‘most vulnerable list’ are disadvantaged mothers and babies who need basic health services and access to prevention programs.
The bad news is that the United States ranks a dismal 41st when compared to other industrialized nations’ infant mortality rate. In the United States, African American infants are 2.4 times as likely as white infants to die before their first birthday. These deaths are especially tragic because they are so preventable.
The good news is that we know what works at preventing infant mortality and making sure babies live to see their first birthday. Services such as outreach, home visitation, case management, health education, perinatal depression screening, interconceptional care and other approaches are all effective at improving birth outcomes. These types of community-based services will not only save lives, but also save billions of dollars in health care costs.
Caring for disadvantaged mothers and babies is certainly a test of whether our society is good and strong. It’s a test that we can’t afford to fail.
No trackbacks yet.