Infant mortality got worse after Roe reversal. Experts are investigating.
By Ariana Eunjung Cha
October 23, 2024
Hundreds more babies died than expected in the year and a half after the Supreme Court ended the constitutional right to abortion in June 2022, raising questions about the ripple effects of the ruling on maternal and child health.
In findings published this week in JAMA Pediatrics, researchers said the shift was detectable several months after the decision. In some months, infant mortality jumped by as much as 7 percent, or 247 excess deaths, from the baseline before the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization ruling, which overturned Roe v. Wade.
Alison Gemmill, a demographer at the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University who was not involved in the new research, said she was surprised by the magnitude of the change.
“I don’t want to say it definitely is due to Dobbs, but it strongly suggests that it is meaningful,” Gemmill said.
Parvati Singh, the lead author of the study and an assistant professor of epidemiology at Ohio State University’s College of Public Health, and Maria Gallo, a sexual and reproductive health epidemiologist at Ohio State, used Centers for Disease Control and Prevention epidemiological data from 2018 to 2023. The data showed the most significant increases in deaths were in infants with congenital anomalies or birth defects. After Dobbs, numerous states introduced full or partial abortion bans. As of October, 13 states have total abortion bans and eight states ban abortions at or before 18 weeks’ gestation, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research and advocacy group that supports abortion rights. Many other states restrict abortion at later stages of pregnancy.
“This suggests it could be due to fetuses incompatible with life … being carried to term,” Singh said.
Researchers said it is unclear whether the trend will continue or whether it is a product of the confusion and turmoil in the months after Dobbs.
Ushma Upadhyay, a professor at the University of California at San Francisco who specializes in reproductive science, said there are many health-care changes in the wake of the reversal of Roe beyond simply access to abortion. She said previous research shows, for example, that people with unwanted pregnancies are less likely to obtain basic health services, which might increase the risk of complications.
“The people who are most marginalized are the ones being forced to carry pregnancies to term — those who are the poorest, with the least access to information,” Upadhyay said.
Upadhyay, who studies abortion access, said she was greatly concerned by the jumps in infant mortality, defined as a death in the first year of life, and what that means for the future of these women. Infant mortality rates have generally fallen over time thanks to modern medicine, but the United States has long stood out for its abysmally high rates as compared with those of other wealthy nations. Singh’s study did not look at breakdowns by state or race, but some states have significantly higher rates than others, and Black babies are at much higher risk.
“Infant mortality is very uncommon, so small increases mean large changes. It’s 2024, and we should not be seeing increases. We should be seeing decreases,” Upadhyay said.
Moreover, in states that have banned abortion, some doctors are no longer offering…
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