Connected Terms: • Lung Diseases, Obstructive • Asthma • Wounds and Injuries • Body Weight • Birth Weight • Patient Care • Hospitalization • Prenatal Care • Feeding Behavior • Breast Feeding • Smoking • Tobacco Smoking • Violence • Domestic Violence • Intimate Partner Violence • Persons • Infant • Infant, Newborn • Infant, Very Low Birth Weight • Infant, Premature • Medically Uninsured • Smokers • Health Status • Health Status Disparities • Nutritional Status • Social Determinants of Health • Mortality • Child Health • Infant Health • Women's Health • Maternal Health • Socioeconomic Factors • Educational Status • Employment • Unemployment • Income • Poverty • Food Assistance • Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) • Insurance Coverage • Insurance, Health • Health Equity • Accidents • 2012 Marion County Public Health Department Commuity Health Assessment Survey • Fetal Mortality • Infant Mortality • Perinatal Mortality • Maternal Mortality • Mortality, Premature • Pregnancy Rate • Pregnancy • Parity • Pregnancy in Adolescence
This link is to the Marion County Public Health Department's comprehensive community health assessment (CHA) report on maternal, infant, and young child (0-4 years of age) health. For the complete CHA report (all age groups), please refer to http://marionhealth.org/mcphd-community-health-assessment-2014/ instead of the above link.
County health rankings provides the percentage of live births with low birthweight (< 2,500 grams), by county. Counties can be compared and contrasted with easy data and map export.
Non-Hispanic Black women in Marion County had higher rates of infant mortality, often double the rate of their non-Hispanic white counterparts. Furthermore, non-Hispanic black infants are born with low birth weight almost twice as often as their non-Hispanic White peers, with rates staying between 12%-15% over the past 10 years. Hispanic women have the lowest rates of low birth weight, never exceeding 8% during the ten-year period. Non-Hispanic white women have higher rates of low birth weight births than Hispanic women, but lower rates than non-Hispanic blacks and overall Marion County rates, DR3484).
The maternal smoking rate among Marion County residents was highest among whites, followed by black and Hispanic residents (DR3484).
This graph show the percentage of very low birth weight births (less than 1,500 grams) in Marion County, by race/ethnicity, from 2007-2016 (DR3484).
This graph shows the percentage of low birth weight births (less than 2,500 grams) in Marion County from 2007-2016. African Americans had the highest rate of low birth weight births for all years reported (DR3484).