Accidents and suicide are the leading causes of child deaths in
rural areas, and both are greater risks for rural than for urban
kids, researchers report in a special issue of Health Affairs
devoted to health in the rural U.S.
"As a society, there is no such thing as 'other people's kids' - we
have to be attentive to the health of all our children," said study
leader Janice Probst of the University of South Carolina, in
Columbia.
"Continuing to examine health outcomes and death - which is the
final and most distressing one - lets us know how we are doing. Are
we making things better?" she told Reuters Health by email. "Short
answer, yes . . . however, we haven't made a dent in rural
disparities."
Probst and colleagues analyzed mortality data from the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to see whether children in
rural areas up to age 19 benefited from the same declines in death
rates during 1999-2017 that the nation saw as a whole. The 1,976
rural counties examined accounted for about 15% of the U.S.
population.
Across all age groups, the death rate for rural children dropped by
19% over the two decades, from 77.6 per 100,000 in 1999 to 62.9 in
2017. But that compares with a 24% drop for urban children, from
66.4 to 50.2 per 100,000.
As a result, the gap in mortality rates between urban and rural
children widened, from 17% in 1999 to 25% in 2017.
In rural areas, non-Hispanic black infants under age 1 and American
Indian/Alaska Native children ages 1 through 19 were at especially
high risk, while Asian/Pacific Islander children had the lowest
death rates across all ages, followed by Hispanic children.
The data revealed several interesting patterns, the researchers
note. For instance, sometimes living in rural areas was beneficial,
in that rural youth were less likely than urban counterparts to die
from assault. This was particularly true for black youth between
ages 15 and 19.
At the same time, rural children ages 10 to 19 were more likely to
die by suicide, probably due to greater availability of firearms and
a lack of mental health services, Probst said.
In addition, death rates due to motor vehicle crashes, a leading
cause of death among all children, were twice as high in rural
areas, likely because of higher driving speeds and lower access to
trauma hospitals, she noted.
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Most surprising, however, was that the death rate among rural
American Indian and Alaska Native children ages 15-19 was typically
about double the rates in the group with the next-highest rates.
Probst called this finding "a national disgrace."
Future studies should investigate the effects of social determinants
of health, such as education, income, race and poverty, on the rural
gap, the study team concludes.
"Even the most 'favorable' regions exhibit higher black mortality
rates than the most 'unfavorable' regions for white mortality
rates," noted Wesley James of Memphis University, in Tennesee, who
was not involved in the study.
"The black population in rural America is often overlooked, but
particularly in the South where there are substantial concentrations
of African Americans, the mortality rates are alarmingly high,"
James told Reuters Health by email.
Probst and colleagues also plan to analyze the national CDC data on
a local level to understand factors that may increase or decrease
mortality. Legislation around health insurance coverage of mental
health services, for instance, could help with suicide rates, Probst
said.
"Place makes a difference . . . and rural areas are locations that
need special attention," said Arthur Cosby of Mississippi State
University, in Starkville, who also wasn't involved in the study.
"Youth suicide rates are increasing for both rural and urban areas,"
he told Reuters Health by email. "Our understanding of the causes
for increasing suicide rates is insufficient and in need of
additional research."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/351qDLg Health Affairs, online November 20,
2019.
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