Mississippi declares public health emergency over surging infant deaths

Mississippi declares public health emergency over surging infant deaths

A week-old baby lies in a neonatal intensive care unit bay at the Norton Children’s Hospital in Louisville, Kentucky. [AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley]

The Mississippi State Health Department declared a public health emergency in August following a dramatic surge in infant mortality in the state. According to MSHD data, Mississippi’s infant mortality rate (IMR)—deaths within the first year of life—rose to 9.7 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2024, marking the highest rate in more than a decade.

This emergency is a signal that the smallest innocent lives are being held hostage by a health system in America that judges its success, not by the thriving of mothers and babies, but by the profits hauled in by private insurers, pharmaceuticals and other health-related conglomerates. Those women and their families who rely on social programs put in place to protect the most vulnerable are paying the ultimate price for the savage cuts being implemented by both big business parties.

Mississippi’s 9.7 IMR is dramatically higher than the provisional US national rate of 5.5 deaths per 1,000. Since 2014, Mississippi has witnessed the deaths of 3,527 babies before their first birthday. The recent increase has been driven significantly by deaths among newborns under 28 days old (neonatal deaths).

Dr. Daniel Edney, the Mississippi state health officer, stated that if babies “dying at the rate that our babies are dying is not a public health emergency, I don’t know what is.” Dr. Michael Warren, chief medical and health officer for the nonprofit March of Dimes, told Jefferson Public Radio that the US is “one of the most dangerous developed countries for giving birth,” noting that the 20,000 infant deaths annually nationwide are “the equivalent of a jumbo jet crashing once a week for an entire year and killing everyone on board.” 

The causes of infant death in Mississippi—including congenital malformations, prematurity, low birth weight, and sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS)—are inextricably linked to an acute lack of medical infrastructure. More than half of the counties in Mississippi are considered maternity healthcare deserts, lacking access to comprehensive prenatal care. Obstetricians are few and far between and often see patients for the first time late in pregnancy, sometimes when they are close to delivery or already in labor.

The unraveling of Medicaid

Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves, like many of his Republican counterparts, aggressively resisted expanding Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Medicaid is a crucial resource, covering nearly 53 percent of births in Mississippi and 40 percent nationwide. Without access to Medicaid, many low-income women are left uninsured before and between pregnancies.

Experts emphasize that untreated chronic conditions such as diabetes and hypertension prior to conception are major contributors to preterm births and subsequent infant deaths, making preconception care critical. 

Inadequate prenatal care, poverty and being a single mother are all associated with increased infant mortality rates. For low-income women managing high-risk pregnancies, such as those involving hypertension, pre-eclampsia, and fetal growth restriction, specialist care—which may require expensive travel—is often financially unattainable.

The IMR figures demonstrate that the burden of this mortality crisis falls overwhelmingly on poor and black families. In Mississippi, the infant mortality rate for African American babies was 15.2 per 1,000 live births in 2024, Time magazine reports, a rate that is more than double the rate for white families (5.8 per 1,000). Nationally, non-Hispanic black infants suffer a mortality rate more than two times the rate of non-Hispanic white infants.

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