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Why Are Our Babies Dying?: Pregnancy, Birth, and Death in America



The book "Why Are Our Babies Dying?: Pregnancy, Birth, and Death in America" discusses the issue of infant mortality and how it is related to systemic discrimination. The book covers topics such as low birth weight, premature birth, and infant death in detail and explains how these issues are related to systemic discrimination. more details
Key Features:
  • Explores the issue of infant mortality and its relationship to systemic discrimination
  • Covers topics such as low birth weight, premature birth, and infant death in detail
  • Explains how these issues are related to systemic discrimination


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Features
Author Sandra Lane
ISBN 9781594514401
Publisher Paradigm Publishers
Manufacturer Paradigm Publishers
Description
The book "Why Are Our Babies Dying?: Pregnancy, Birth, and Death in America" discusses the issue of infant mortality and how it is related to systemic discrimination. The book covers topics such as low birth weight, premature birth, and infant death in detail and explains how these issues are related to systemic discrimination.

Syracuse, New York, in the late 1980s led U.S. cities in African American infant deaths. Even today, in this all American city, infants of color die more than two times as often as white babies. Infant mortality is too often addressed as if it were an isolated problem, rather than part of a systemic and repeating pattern of embedded racism and structural violence. The clearing of whole neighborhoods during urban renewal, coupled with the collapse of industry, brought unintended consequences. Dilapidated rental housing, abandoned houses, and empty lots provide the conditions for lead poisoning, gonorrhea, and illicit drug use. Inadequate education, unemployment, and racially biased arrest and sentencing underpin the epidemic of African American male incarceration. Inmate fathers cannot provide financial support and only limited emotional support during collect calls from jail or prison. Supermarkets fled the inner city, where corner stores sell cigarettes, malt liquor, lottery tickets, and drug paraphernalia in place of healthy food. The stories and the data in this book show that low birth weight, premature birth, and infant death are a part of life patterns resulting from systemic discrimination increasing risk over a lifetime and, in some cases, reaching the next generation.
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