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Adina Ekwerike, MPH Health Program Manager Philadelphia Interdisciplinary Mortality Review Thursday, May 18, 2006. Understanding and Preventing Infant Deaths in Philadelphia Local Practice. Infant Mortality United States, 1925-2003. Rate per 1,000 live births. 2003 preliminary rate - 6.85.
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Adina Ekwerike, MPH Health Program ManagerPhiladelphia Interdisciplinary Mortality ReviewThursday, May 18, 2006 Understanding and Preventing Infant Deaths in Philadelphia Local Practice
Infant MortalityUnited States, 1925-2003 Rate per 1,000 live births 2003 preliminary rate - 6.85 Source: National Center for Health Statistics, final mortality data Prepared by March of Dimes Perinatal Data Center, 2002
Philadelphia’s Demographics • 5th largest US city • Population estimate – 1.49M (7/2000) • Infant Mortality Rate 10.7, in 2003 Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, Vital Statistics Report
Philadelphia - 2003 • 21,313 births • 50% African American or Black • 30% White • 20% Other • 228 infant deaths • 62% African American • 32% White • 6% Other Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, Vital Statistics Report, 2003
2003 Causes of Death among Infants Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, Vital Statistics Report, 2003
Philadelphia Infant Mortality by Race 1990-2003 Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, Vital Statistics Report, 1990 - 2003
Trends in Infant Mortality in Philadelphia, 1992 through 2003 Black or African American All Races Source: The Philadelphia Department of Public Health, Vital Statistics Report, 1992 - 2003
Infant Mortality in Philadelphia Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, Vital Statistics Report, 2003
Response to Local Public Health Concern • 2003 MEO began death scene investigations • “2004 A Bed of Tragedies”, Philadelphia Daily News • (City alerted to 43 deaths in 17 months while sleeping with others) • City-wide Safe Sleeping Press conference • (The Philadelphia Department of Public Health and the Department of Human Services)
Infant Deaths from Sudden Unexplained Infant Death (SUID) and Hypoxia and Pending Deaths in Philadelphia, 71 Infant Deaths 48 in Co-sleeping Environment 23 not in Co-sleeping Environment Location of Death 8 Overlay Deaths • Sofas/couches (5) • In a crib w/ sibling (2) • Adult bed (1) Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, April 1, 2003 – October 11, 2004
Collaboration with Community and Stakeholders • Educate community and stakeholders about complex issues of infant safe-sleeping and bed sharing: • - safe sleeping initiative (e.g., cribs for Kids) • - Sudden Unexplained Infant Death • - back-to sleep • - bed sharing • - exposure to environmental tobacco smoke
Philadelphia Interdisciplinary Mortality Review (PIMR) Division of Maternal, Child & Family Health
PIMR’s Teams • Rapid Review Infant Death Team • Fetal and Infant Mortality Review • Homicide Review • Non-Homicide Review
Role of PIMR • The PIMR program is a multidisciplinary, and multi-agency process that reviews cases of deaths. • The team coordinates, collect and review data from law enforcement, court systems, child protective services, medical examiner, health and social services providers.
Infant Deaths Receiving Rapid Review • 111 deaths • 27 in ’03 • 46 in ’04 • 38 from 01/05 – 09/05 (preliminary data) • All reviewed by the same forensic investigator • All expired while sleeping Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, 2003 - 2005
Racial Disparities’03 – 09/30/05 % Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, 2003 - 2005
Gender Disparities’03 – 09/30/05 % Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, 2003 - 2005
Risk Factors Present’03 – ‘04 ETS Not on back 2.9% 14.7% 10.3% 35.3% 7.4% 20.6% 0.0% Co-sleeping 8.8% had no risk factors n=68, 5 missing Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, 2003 - 2005
Comparing 03/04 through 09/04 to 03/05 through 09/05 03/04 – 09/04 03/05 – 09/05 19 25 # of Deaths # of Co-sleeping Deaths 14 15 Notes: City-wide safe sleeping press conference and subsequent safe sleeping initiatives (e.g., Cribs for Kids) initiated in October ’04. Time periods selected to control for seasonal differences. p > 0.05 Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, 2004 - 2005
Co-Sleeping and Overlay52 Rapid Review Cases • Co-sleeping: 62% (32 of 52 cases) • Overlay: 16% (5 of 32 cases) • Crib present, not used: 74% (17 of 23 cases) • 9 cases had no data on cribs Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, 2003 - 2005
Prematurity52 Rapid Review Cases • Premature: 17% (9 cases of 52) Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, 2003 - 2005
Funding Source • City’s public funds • Healthy Start federal grant • Title V Block Grant
Proposed Recommendations • Provide education and training on SIDS/SUID risk factors with emphasis on exposure to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS)to the Department of Human Services (DHS) workers and community-wide providers. • Develop a specific focus on ETS prevention and education • Collaborate with the Fetal and Infant Mortality Review (FIMR) Community Action Team to create literature on ETS and infant health for childbirth and parenting classes Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, Philadelphia Interdisciplinary Mortality Review Policy Committee
Proposed Recommendations • Collaborate with the FIMR Community Action Team and DHS to develop a community education campaign/media strategy regarding ETS • Conduct a cross training between fire department staff and health department • Plan educational campaign for block captains Source: Philadelphia Department of Public Health, Philadelphia Interdisciplinary Mortality Review Policy Committee
PIMR’s Plans • Conduct timely death reviews • Facilitate PDPH’s access to medical records • Link PIMR findings to MCFH, PDPH, DHS, state, federal other citywide initiatives • Link PIMR findings to community and policymaker’s initiatives • Maintain collaborate relationship with states and national death reviews