
US children are much more likely to die than kids in similar countries, study finds
Chronic diseasesFacebookTweetLink
Follow
American children's health has declined profoundly over the past few decades, a new study shows, and the issues are so serious that children in the US are dying at a much higher rate than those in similar high-income countries.
What's particularly frustrating is that the bulk of the health problems are avoidable, said Dr. Chris Forrest, co-author of the study published Monday in the journal JAMA. There isn't a genetic defect unique to American children and it's not about socioeconomics within the United States, he said: The results were applicable to the total pediatric population.
'I think we all should be disturbed by this,' said Forrest, a professor of pediatrics at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and director of the Applied Clinical Research Center. 'Kids in this country are really suffering.'
From 2007 to 2022, children ages 1 to 19 were 1.8 times more likely to die than children in other high-income countries, the study found. The biggest disparities were in deaths from gun violence and traffic accidents; kids in the US were 15 times more likely than their counterparts in other countries to die by firearms and more than twice as likely to die in motor vehicle crashes.
But US children are also sicker because of chronic conditions, Forrest said, and that's a newer phenomenon. In the '90s, when he started taking care of children, he said, he hardly ever saw one with a chronic condition. Today, nearly half of children are getting medical care for a chronic health problem, the study says.
The researchers, who analyzed hundreds of millions of health records from five nationally representative surveys and electronic health records from 10 pediatric health systems, found that a child in 2023 was 15% to 20% more likely to have a chronic condition than a child in 2011.
Asthma was the one chronic condition for which rates improved in the studied time period, but it was an outlier. Rates of mental health problems such as depression, anxiety and loneliness increased, as did rates of autism, behavioral conduct problems, developmental delays, speech language disorders and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorders.
Rates of physical issues also increased significantly, including problems with obesity, difficulties with limitations in activity, problems with sleeping and early menstruation. A period before age 12 is associated with immediate health problems including type 2 diabetes, but in the long term, it may also raise the risk of heart and blood pressure problems, studies show.
Chronic conditions were the focus of a recent federal government report from the Make America Healthy Again Commission that said chronic disease had made children 'the sickest generation in American history.' That report blamed ultraprocessed food, exposure to chemicals in the environment, pervasive technology use and the overprescription of medicine.
The new study doesn't pinpoint what's driving the increase in chronic conditions, but Forrest doesn't believe it's just what's on the MAHA list. Rather, he believes the nation's entire approach toward caring for children needs to change.
'Our kids are being raised in a very toxic environment, and it's not just the chemicals. It's not just the food and the iPhones. It's a much broader. It's much deeper. It's what we call the developmental ecosystem, and it makes it very challenging to change it,' Forrest said. 'That's a hard answer for people who want a pithy message that tells them how to fix the issues. It's about where they're growing up, where they're going to school, they're playing, where their families live, their neighborhoods, and it's not just one population. It's the whole nation that needs help.'
In the 1960s, children in the US were dying at about the same rate as in countries with similar incomes, but that started to change in the 1970s. The US now has about 54 excess child deaths per day compared with 18 other wealthy countries.
'This means the same kid born in this country is much more likely to die than if they were born in Germany or Denmark. Why are we allowing this to happen?' Forrest asked.
In an editorial that published alongside the study, pediatricians from Virginia and Washington wrote that there's reason to worry the health of US children will continue to fall behind, and political winds are shifting in the wrong direction.
'While the administration's Make America Healthy Again movement is drawing welcome attention to chronic diseases and important root causes such as ultra-processed foods, it is pursuing other policies that will work against the health interests of children,' they wrote, noting massive budget cuts at the US Department of Health and Human Services, including injury prevention, cancelled funding for safe sleep programs, Medicaid reductions, shrinking mental health funding and new initiatives that fuel vaccine hesitancy among parents.
The study found that from 2007 to 2022, babies in the US were 1.78 times more likely to die than children in 18 other high-income nations. The biggest disparities in deaths were from prematurity and sudden, unexpected infant death, which is accidental suffocation and strangulation in bed and other deaths from unknown causes.
But it's not just children who are at risk, Forrest said. 'Kids are not getting great start in life because women are also suffering in this country.'
Maternity deserts, where pregnant people don't have easy access to a doctor, have become a growing problem. According to the March of Dimes, about 35% of counties in the US are maternity deserts, a number likely to grow as states pass stricter abortion laws, driving doctors toward states where it's less complicated to provide care. In 2020-22, there were an excess of over 10,000 preterm births among people living in maternity care deserts or limited-access counties, the group says.
Dr. Colleen Kraft, a pediatrician at Children's Hospital Los Angeles who did not work on the research, said the study provides good data on broad problems.
'Nothing here surprises me at all,' said Kraft, former president of the American Academy of Pediatrics, who wasn't involved in the new research.
Over 35 years of practice, she has seen the change in her own patients. At the beginning, she treated mostly infectious disease, but vaccines for conditions like meningococcal disease changed that. Now, she fears that anti-vaccine sentiment could erode much of that progress.
She also treats a lot more children now for chronic conditions that the community can help prevent, she said.
For example, schools could restrict mobile phones so kids interact more, easing problems with loneliness, anxiety and depression. Families can implement a media plan where all devices are plugged into a central location – not a bedroom – so children can get more sleep. Parents can also encourage kids to play outside and engage in more unstructured time to be social and develop their imaginations.
'There are some very common-sense things families can do,' Kraft said.
To see major improvement in childhood health in the US, Forrest believes the country will need to undergo a major transformation. In other countries, for example, day care workers are professionals who get paid a living wage, so kids get quality care. Parents also get more time off when they have a child.
'It's time to rethink how we treat kids and how we're supporting families,' Forrest said. 'Children in our nation our like the proverbial canary in the coal mine. When their health is deteriorating, that means the foundation of our nation is also deteriorating.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Illinois becomes 1st state to require student mental health screenings
For students in Illinois, mental health screenings will soon be required alongside annual vision and hearing exams. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker signed a bill into law Thursday that will require public school students in grades 3 through 12 in the state to undergo a mental health screening each year. The change will go into effect in the 2027-2028 school year with at least one screening per student required annually, according to a press release from Pritzker's office. Pritzker also said the new legislation makes Illinois the first state to mandate universal mental health assessments for public school students. "At a time when our kids are struggling with anxiety and depression more than ever before, it's our responsibility to ensure that young people have all the support that they need to get the help that they deserve," Pritzker said in remarks at the signing ceremony. "Our goal is an integrated, comprehensive approach to quality mental and behavioral health services for young people across the state," Pritzker added, saying the legislation will pave the way for schools to receive resources and support to implement the new push for screenings. Kids who own smartphones before age 13 have worse mental health outcomes: Study The bill, SB1560, encourages schools to connect student caregivers and parents with the Behavioral Health Care and Ongoing Navigation or BEACON Portal, a tool launched in January that can provide information about available mental health resources and services. Illinois' move comes two months after the Trump administration pulled funding for about $1 billion in mental health grants. The Department of Education said in May that the grants would be discontinued because the money was going to "race-based actions" instead of mental health services in schools. Trump administration discontinues $1 billion in school mental health grants Students' mental health has been top of mind ahead of the back-to-school season. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, anxiety and depression are some of the most common mental health conditions diagnosed in children between the ages of 3 and 17, with mental health being a significant concern among teens. The Illinois State Board of Education has until Sept. 1, 2026, to provide schools with guidance and policies to implement the mandated mental health screenings. The state is also promising schools free screening tools and access to technology to fulfill the mandate. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Restaurant Workers, Tell Us The Filthy Secrets Hiding Behind The Kitchen Doors
If you've ever worked or currently work in food service, you know verrrrrry well that things aren't always so squeaky clean behind the scenes. From grease traps to food overloaded with salt and butter, to dishwashers who never wash their hands, sometimes it makes you never want to eat at a restaurant ever again. So if you're a current or former restaurant worker, we want to hear from you: What hygiene practices, whether in the kitchen, on the floor, or among staff and customers, are most often overlooked on the job? Perhaps you were a line cook and constantly saw roaches scurrying around the kitchen. When you said something to the restaurant owners, they said, verbatim, "All restaurants have roaches. Get used to it, bud." Related: Maybe you routinely saw dishwashers and wait staff using dirty, grease-covered rags, used to polish "clean" glasses. Even worse, the glasses were hardly even cleaned beforehand, sitting in cold, dirty water for hours at a time. Related: Or maybe you worked at a popular fast-food spot and once cleaned behind the ice cream and soda machines, only to discover it must have never been done before. What you found back there? A wall that appeared to be growing its own ecosystem, completely coated in black and green mold. Whatever it was, tell us — what's the most overlooked (or flat-out disgusting) hygiene practice you saw while working in food service? Let us know in the comments or at this anonymous form. Also in Community: Also in Community: Also in Community: Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Nearly 2 dozen Michigan beaches have high bacteria counts. See the list of place to avoid
Nearly two dozen Michigan beaches are under bacteria advisories or are closed as Michiganders head into the Aug. 2-3 weekend. In a state to more than 1,000 beaches, state officials say 21 beaches in counties across Michigan aren't fit for swimming. As of Friday, Aug. 1, there are multiple Michigan beaches that are currently closed or under advisory due to high bacteria levels — likely from wildlife, according to the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy, which provides that information via an online dashboard. Beaches with closures or advisories Beaches include: Campbell Lake near Robert Morris Park in Kalamazoo County Clinch Park in Grand Traverse County Dumont Lake County Park Beach in Allegan County East Jordan Tourist Park in Charlevoix County Elm Point Beach in Charlevoix County Emerald Lake (Lyster Rd) in Oakland County Four Mile Beach in Chippewa County Grove Street Beach in Oakland County Halls Lake at Isabella County Independence Lake County Park in Washtenaw County Lakeview Waterfront Park in Roscommon County Lakewood Farms (Sharon Street) in Oakland County Newburgh and Sumac Pointes (Hines Park) in Wayne County Philp County Park in Huron County Pontiac Lake in Oakland County Ramona Park in Kalamazoo County Seven Lakes State Park in Oakland County St. Clair Shores Memorial Park Beach in Macomb County Sylvan Lake in Oakland County West End Beach in Grand Traverse County Willow Street Beach in Keego Harbor County health departments routinely collect water samples for bacteria levels at beaches across the state to determine whether the water is safe for swimming, according to the EGLE. To be considered safe for swimming, the E. coli counts must be below 300 per 100 milliliters. Check the conditions of your local beach The EGLE map lists information for beaches in Michigan, including water quality sampling results and beach advisories and closures. The website also includes information on combined or sanitary sewer overflows, which lead to partially treated or untreated sewage being released into rivers and streams. Why do officials check for E. coli? Generally, coliforms are bacteria that are not harmful and are naturally present in the environment, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. They are used as an indicator that other, potentially harmful, fecal bacteria (indicated by the E. coli species) could be present. If any routine or repeat sample is total coliform positive or present, the system (i.e., the lab) must further analyze that sample to determine whether E. coli are present. E. coli is a more specific indicator of fecal contamination and is a potentially more harmful pathogen than other bacteria typically found in the coliform group. Consumption of or contact with water contaminated with feces of warm-blooded animals can cause a variety of illnesses, the U.S. Geological Survey said. Minor gastrointestinal discomfort is probably the most common symptom; however, pathogens that may cause only minor sickness in some people may cause serious conditions or death in others, especially in the very young, old, or those with weakened immune systems. What is swimmer's itch? Does E. coli cause it? Swimmer's itch is a skin rash caused by an allergic reaction to microscopic parasites that infect some birds and mammals, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Swimmer's itch is often incorrectly attributed to E. coli exposure, according to the Clean Lakes Alliance. Symptoms can include: Tingling, burning or itching of the skin Small reddish pimples Small blisters What can I do about swimmer's itch? Swimmer's itch typically clears up on its own within a week. If the itching is severe, your health care provider may recommend prescription-strength lotions or creams, the Mayo Clinic said. Some home treatments may provide relief until it goes away: Apply a corticosteroid cream or an anti-itch lotion, such as those that contain calamine. Take an oral nonprescription antihistamine (Benadryl) or one with loratadine (Alavert, Claritin, others). Avoid scratching the rash. Cover affected areas with a clean, damp washcloth. Soak in a bath sprinkled with Epsom salts, baking soda or an oatmeal-based bath product (Aveeno, others). Make a paste of baking soda and water, and then apply it to the affected skin. This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: 21 Michigan beaches not safe for swimming. See the list Solve the daily Crossword