Guilford County has been tracking infant deaths for decades, yet officials there continue to struggle with high death rates and no answers.
Jean Workman and Leandra Vernon with hope to change that with the formation of North Carolina鈥檚 only Fetal and Infant Mortality Review program.
鈥淎s time goes on, the more we learn, the better we can change things and learn what's affecting our families,鈥 Vernon told NC Health 瓜神app.
Fetal and Infant Mortality Review programs exist in more than two dozen states. While they are not all set up the same, one aspect is key to all of them 鈥 access to information.
But Every Baby Guilford 鈥 a anchored in the county health department 鈥 has struggled to get some of the data and reports that would help its teams get a better idea about what is happening and determine what changes could help reduce deaths.
The North Carolina Child Fatality Task Force has been working on reducing infant and child mortality rates since its formation in the early 1990s, when North Carolina鈥檚 infant mortality rate was the worst in the nation. The legislature-supported body in March to lawmakers that they consider bills to grant the authority for mortality review programs to be started 鈥 and give reviewers access to the necessary medical records. Any bill also should provide immunity protections to reviewers and review materials, members of the task force said.
鈥淭here's been a lot of limitations,鈥 Vernon said. 鈥淏eing the first ones that are doing this in North Carolina has been a challenge.鈥
Death rate too high
The infant mortality rate 鈥渋s a key indicator of the overall health of a county, state, region, or nation,鈥 according to Every Baby Guilford, which detailed the issues in its 2021 .
Guilford County鈥檚 rate stood at 7.6 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2021, the most recent year for which data are available.
That鈥檚 higher than the state鈥檚 rate of 6.8 deaths per 1,000 live births and the national rate of 5.4. It鈥檚 also higher than the rates in other large N.C. counties: Forsyth (7.2), Durham (6.2), Wake (5.5) and Mecklenburg (5.1), according to Every Baby Guilford.
The main causes of infant mortality in the county are prematurity/low birth weight, birth defects and sudden infant death syndrome.
Two events paved the way for Guilford County to form a Fetal and Infant Mortality Review program.
In 2019, the existing Guilford County Coalition on Infant Mortality relaunched as Every Baby Guilford, which describes itself as 鈥渁 collective action movement building collaborative solutions within the community to disrupt longstanding health outcomes and racial disparities.鈥
Around that time, commissioners shared their desire to make examining infant mortality a strategic priority, said Workman, executive director of Every Baby Guilford.
Vernon assumed leadership of the review program in September 2020, taking on the task of training herself during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. She spent time in Michigan learning from the program in Kalamazoo. The Escambia County, Florida, program has also served as a mentor to Guilford County鈥檚 program.
Then in June 2021, Every Baby Guilford set an ambitious goal to reduce disparities in the county鈥檚 infant mortality rate by half by 2026.
How it works
Reviewing fetal and infant deaths in the United States began with pilot programs in the mid-1980s by the federal Maternal Child Health Bureau, which reviewed deaths of babies born alive who did not survive until their first birthday.
The move to add stillbirth reviews began in 1990, according to Rosemary Fournier, the Fetal and Infant Mortality Review director for the .
The national movement to create Fetal and Infant Mortality Review programs really began in 1991 when reviews of fetal deaths were added to the existing review process for infant deaths, Fournier told the N.C. Child Fatality Task Force last fall.
Today, there are more than 145 programs in 27 states, plus the Northern Mariana Islands and Puerto Rico. Some programs cover an entire state with a regional structure. Others, such as Guilford County鈥檚, focus on a local area.
Fetal and Infant Mortality Review programs use multidisciplinary teams to examine confidential and anonymized cases of infant and stillbirth loss. Information comes from a variety of sources, from death certificates to medical records, including records from prenatal care, home visits and reports from social services, such as the federal nutrition program for women, infants and children.
鈥淚t gives us more information,鈥 Fournier said. 鈥漌hen we look at deaths that are undetermined or unknown, when we do this really in-depth review, we're going to find out more information about those gaps in care and what we can do to improve services for families.鈥
Interviewing the family, when possible, is a key component of these reviews, Vernon said. She said the team can definitely see the difference with getting direct information from a family. It helps them understand more about what happened to the family, what barriers they faced and what services they received, and it can inform future prevention efforts.
Guilford鈥檚 team waits six months to a year after a death before approaching a family for an interview.
鈥淲e want to be respectful of their time and their space to grieve,鈥 Vernon said. 鈥淪o even though it's important for our purposes, we value their grief and their pain.鈥
Leandra Vernon is coordinator of Guilford County's Fetal and Infant Review program. Families aren鈥檛 required to sit for an interview and, often, by the time the team reaches out, the mother is pregnant again and may not want to revisit the loss, Vernon said. She said the review team has only conducted about five interviews with families since starting reviews in 2022.
Fournier said a family interview provides 鈥渟o much rich information鈥 and can steer the team toward issues they would not otherwise know about.
鈥淲e might make assumptions about a case before we've interviewed the family,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o it gives us that qualitative data and the correct information about the factors that are contributing to infant deaths, and really contextualizes the data.鈥
Making recommendations
The information gathered by a review team gets turned into recommendations, which in Guilford鈥檚 case, go to a Community Action Group whose members include the county health director, commissioners, hospital administrators and community navigators.
The team then meets quarterly with its action group. The action group takes those recommendations, refines them and implements evidence-based action strategies or interventions in the community.
Recommendations have so far focused on five areas: workforce development/ community education, safe sleep, electronic medical records, navigation and referrals.
While Greensboro is resource-rich, Workman said, gaps remain.
鈥淲e often trip over one another to ensure that a family has got those resources secured,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd oftentimes, the ball drops because we make the referral, but there's 鈥 minimal follow-through to ensure that family actually got connected.鈥
The deep dive into data and processes and personal interviews provides a better understanding of what is working, what isn鈥檛 and where there are gaps.
鈥淲e have identified cases where a patient is there trying to say 鈥業'm having pain,鈥欌 she said, but if there鈥檚 a language or cultural barrier, perhaps the patient doesn鈥檛 receive needed services.
鈥淭here is that data that shows that a lot of times Black women are seen as resilient, that their voices are not being heard,鈥 she added. 鈥淎nd when they complain about things, the system just looks at them like 鈥楢re you just complaining? You're going to be OK,鈥 and they鈥檙e sent home.鈥
Fournier said the review process can 鈥渉elp us undo the damage and address and understand racial inequities鈥 by digging more deeply into everything surrounding a death and including the voices of mothers who often aren鈥檛 being heard.
Need for access
The biggest issue for Guilford County鈥檚 Fetal and Infant Review program has been accessing records. It took 14 months of working with Cone Health and their lawyers to hash out an agreement to get access to their information, Vernon said.
Even with that agreement, she has run into roadblocks. There was one instance where a nurse was not aware of the agreement or the review program, she said.
鈥淚t created a whole set of emails like 鈥榃ho are you? Why do you have access to our records? Since when has this been happening?鈥欌 Vernon said.
Few states have legislation or administrative rules that mandate Fetal and Infant Mortality Review programs, according to the National Center for Fatality Review and Prevention.
The legislation that Vernon and Guilford County are seeking in North Carolina would give such review programs authority, provide protection and create a structure based on best practices.
While Guilford County had 44 infant deaths in 2021, the review team has not been able to dig into every case due to access issues, Vernon said. The team only recently conducted its 19th review and is now starting on cases from last year.
鈥淎ny decent society should have measures in place for their families to feel safe,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e think of seatbelts. We think of helmets, and there's all kinds of programs for those things. But what are we doing for the little tiny babies 鈥 when they're born?鈥
This first appeared on and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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