State
of the Child 1996
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In
1988, Massachusetts ranked fifth on a range of indicators
of child health and economic well-being in the national
KIDS COUNT report on all fifty states. By the 1996
report, the Commonwealth had dropped to 13th place.
(1) This relative decline in the status of children
in Massachusetts over the past several years is particularly
sad -- and ironic -- because it stands in stark contrast
to our past history and prior reputation as a model
for progressive children's policies, programs, and
services.
Of
equal concern, the overall status of children within
Massachusetts declined between 1985 and 1992, on the
ten key indicators of child well-being used by the
national KIDS COUNT project. (2) In addition, Massachusetts
ranked a dismal 44th in the nation in its rate of
improvement between 1985 and 1992 on the ten key indicators.
This means that during this time period, the overall
condition of children either deteriorated more or
improved less in Massachusetts than in 43 other states.
(3)
Despite
rhetoric about Massachusetts' high teen birth rate,
the state has experienced considerable improvement
in this area and now has one of the five lowest rates
in the nation.(4) In addition, Massachusetts can take
pride in having achieved the lowest infant mortality
rate ever recorded in the state's history (6.0 infant
deaths per 1,000 live births in 1994). (5) Even before
this, in 1993, Massachusetts already had the third
lowest infant mortality rate in the nation. (6) However,
although the gap between the white and black infant
mortality rates has narrowed since 1985, it is still
unacceptably large, with blacks still experiencing
more than twice the white rate. (7)
The
number of children under age 18 without health insurance
climbed dramatically in the last six years and now
numbers 160,000 -- a startling 75% jump between 1989
and 1995. (8) (Note: In 1996 the Massachusetts
Health Care Access Bill was passed guaranteeing health
insurance to 120,000 Massachusetts children from working
poor families.)
Despite
recent improvements in the economy, 200,000 children
still lived in poverty in 1994, substantially more
than the number who were poor in 1989. At the same
time, Massachusetts has slipped dramatically in its
ranking among all states on child poverty, from 6th
place in 1986, to 23rd place in 1992. (9) In addition,
the gap between the richest and poorest families in
the State widened dramatically during the 1980s. (10)
A substantially higher proportion of minority children
lack the basic economic supports, housing, nutrition,
educational opportunity, safety, and health care that
others take for granted. Robbed of opportunity, far
too many Massachusetts children of all races and backgrounds
will not realize their full potential unless this
alarming trend is reversed soon.
The
population of Massachusetts has been aging in recent
decades. In 1960, about one out of three people living
in Massachusetts was under the age of 18 (33.2%).
By 1990, only about one out of five were children
(22.6%). (11) In 1994, there were approximately 1,424,000
children living in Massachusetts, and the percentage
of the total population under 18 increased slightly
to 23.6%. (12)
| Children
as Percent of Population |
 |
In
1960, a full one-third of the State's population
was under the age of 18. By 1994, the number of
children had increased to approximately 1,424,000,
but they represented fewer than one in four residents
of all ages. The Census Bureau projects that the
percentage of the population under 18 will remain
less than 25% through the end of this century.(14)
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At
the same time, there continues to be an increase in
the racial and ethnic diversity of the Commonwealth's
children. In 1990, fewer than one out of five children
were not white and not Hispanic. By the year 2000,
it is projected that nearly one out of four children
will be from a minority group.
Hispanics
are the largest minority in Massachusetts -- especially
among the youngest children -- followed by blacks
and Asians. There is a great deal of ethnic diversity
within each group as well. In 1994, the majority of
Hispanic births were Puerto Rican, followed by Dominican,
Central American, and South American ancestry.
While
the majority of black infants had mothers who identified
themselves as American, many were Haitian, West Indian,
or Other black. Among Asian infants, Chinese was the
largest single ethnic group reported, followed by
Vietnamese, Cambodian and Other South East Asian.(13)
|
Children
by Race/Ethnicity
|
 |
The
racial and ethnic diversity among Massachusetts
children continues to grow. In 1990, fewer than
one out of five children were not white and not
Hispanic. By the year 2000, it is projected that
nearly one out of four children will be from a
minority group. (15) |
|
Students
Whose First Language is not English
|
|
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| In
October, 1995, over 114,000 students who had a
native language other than English were enrolled
in Massachusetts public schools, up from about
97,000 in October 1992. The majority (53%) spoke
Spanish as their first language, but well over
100 languages were represented. (16) |
Although
both the per capita and median family income in Massachusetts
are well above those for the nation as a whole, thousands
of children in our wealthy, but high cost-of-living,
state live in poverty without even basic daily physical
necessities such as adequate food, clothing, and shelter.
As the economy worsened in the 1980s and early 1990s,
the number and percent of children living in poverty
rose.
With
the upturn in the national economy in recent years,
Massachusetts, with other states, has seen a welcome
decline in child poverty. However, the Commonwealth
can no longer claim to have among the lowest percent
of poor children in the country. In 1986, only 5 states
had a lower percent of children in poverty than Massachusetts.
By 1992, the State's ranking had dropped to 23rd.
(17)
Equally
disturbing are the growing gap between rich and poor
families and persistent racial disparities among the
"haves" and "have-nots". In 1981, the median income
of the top 20% of families was about $60,000 higher
than the bottom 20% of families. By 1989, the gap
had grown to nearly $70,000. (18)
|
Percent
of Children Living in Poverty
|
 |
| In
1994, about 200,000 children under age 18 were
living in poverty in Massachusetts. While this
represents a substantial decline from 1990, nearly
one out of six children still were poor in 1994
(19) -- many more than were poor in 1989. |
|
Children
Dependent on Assistance Programs
|
 |
|
Over
150,000 children relied on AFDC at the end of
1995 to meet their basic needs. Nearly 30,000
fewer children received support from AFDC (Aid
to Families with Dependent Children) in December,
1995, than in December, 1994. (20) Between
the summers of 1989 and 1994 the number of children
receiving food stamps increased by 56.7% from
153,172 to 240,069. (21)
In
December, 1995, there were a total of 125,979
recipients of the Special Supplemental Feeding
Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC).
Twenty percent of all WIC recipients were pregnant
women, 22% were infants less than one year old,
and 58% were children between the ages of one
and five. (22) The WIC program appears well
on its way to meeting its goal of serving 85%
of all eligible state residents.
|
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Medicaid
|
 |
On
December 15, 1995, 284,158 children were enrolled
in Medicaid, and a total of 410,297 children
were enrolled at some point during Federal FY1995.
(23)
|
EPSDT
-Early
and Periodic Screening,
Diagnosis and Treatment
|
| Medicaid
has made great advances in providing preventive
health care checkups to poor children under managed
care. In Federal FY1993, only 64% of eligible
children received EPSDT (Early and Periodic Screening,
Diagnosis and Treatment) checkups. By Federal
FY1995, 83% of eligible children had their regular
screenings.
(24) |
 |
Contrary
to widespread public misconception,
the rate of births to Massachusetts teenagers (ages
15-19) decreased steadily between 1990 and 1994, and
is one of the lowest in the nation. In 1992, only
four other states had a lower overall teen birth rate
(ages 15-19), and only one state had a lower birth
rate among women ages 18-19. (25) Like many states
with a low teen birth rate, a relatively high proportion
of teen mothers are unmarried. This should not obscure
the fact, however, that Massachusetts has greatly
reduced the overall rate of births to teens.
While
many provisions of Massachusetts' new "welfare reform"
law are targeted at teen parents, there were only
668 mothers up to age 17 receiving welfare out of
a caseload of about 92,000 families when the law went
into effect in November, 1995. (26)
Teen
Birth Rates: Massachusetts vs. USA
|
 |
The
1994 teen birth rate in Massachusetts (births
per 1,000 women ages 15-19) was 13% lower than
the state's rate in 1989, and was approximately
half the 1993 national teen birth rate. (27) |
|
Massachusetts
Births: Teens vs. All Women
|
 |
In
1994, there were a total of 6,567 births to women
under age 20, a slight decline from the previous
year of 6,606 births. The percentage of all births
to teenage mothers in Massachusetts was 7.8%,
unchanged from 1993 and well below the 1993 national
percentage of 12.8%. (28) |
The
foundations of infant and childhood health are laid
before a woman conceives. All women need early and
ongoing comprehensive and culturally sensitive prenatal
care, and all children need appropriate health services
from birth on. While some tragedies are unavoidable,
many instances of infant mortality, prematurity, and
low birthweight could have been prevented had adequate
primary preventive health care services been accessible.
The
increase in the percentage of women receiving adequate
prenatal care is an important step in the right direction.
However, it must be remembered that prenatal care
alone is not sufficient to ensure healthy babies.
Many factors contribute to infant mortality, low birth
weight and poor infant health, including chronic undernourishment
of the mother, substance use, poor maternal health,
and lack of health care prior to conception.
|
Trends
in Adequacy of Prenatal Care
|
 |
The
percentage of all women who received adequate
prenatal care (29) has increased from 80.1%
in 1990 to 84.3% in 1994. For black women the
rates have improved significantly in the last
few years; only 60.0% received adequate prenatal
care in 1990, compared to 70.0% in 1994. However,
although the gap in adequate care between black
and white women has narrowed since 1989, stark
disparities in prenatal care continue to exist.
(30)
|
|
Low
Birthweight: Age and Race/Ethnicity
|
 |
| Babies
born weighing less than 5.5 pounds are at increased
risk for mortality and a variety of other adverse
conditions. In 1994, 5,335 low birthweight babies
were born in Massachusetts, representing 6.4%
of all births but 10.2% of births to teen mothers.
Once again, the overall percentage of low birthweight
infants was lower in Massachusetts than in the
U.S., but low birthweight among black infants
was 2.2 times higher than among white infants.
(31) |
|
Low
Birthweight:
Level
of Prenatal Care and Race/Ethnicity
|
 |
| Women
who received late or no prenatal care had low
birthweight babies two times more often than women
who had adequate care, regardless of race. Overall,
12.6% of births in 1994 among women who received
late or no prenatal care were low birthweight,
compared to only 5.9% among women who received
adequate prenatal care. In all categories of prenatal
care, black women had the highest percentages
of low birthweight infants (32) : 17.9% of those
with late or no care; and 11.1% of those with
adequate care. |
| Infant
Mortality by Race |
 |
| The
overall infant mortality rate in Massachusetts
was 6.0 (per 1,000 live births) in 1994. Although
the drop in the death rate was much greater among
black infants than among white infants between
1989 and 1994, the 1994 rate among black babies
still was 2.4 times higher than among white babies.
The Hispanic rate in 1994 was 1.4 times higher
than the white rate. (33) |
|
Uninsured
Massachusetts Children
|
 |
The
number of Massachusetts children without health
insurance has grown more than 75% in the last
six years, going from 91,000 children in 1989
(34) , to 160,000 in 1995. (35) The majority of
these children's parents are employed with household
incomes above the poverty level.
(Note: In 1996 the Massachusetts Health Care Access
Bill was passed guaranteeing health insurance
to 120,000 Massachusetts children from working
poor families.) |
Contributors
to State of the Child 1996 include: Judy Weiss, ScD,
Kids Count Data Analyst; Christing Poff, Kids Count
Coordinator; Franna Diamond, Consultant; and Co-Directors
of Massachusetts Kids Count, John Mudd, Massachusetts
Advocacy Center, and Jetta Bernier, Executive Director,
Massachusetts Committee for Children and Youth.
(c)
1996 Permission to copy or disseminate information
from this data report is granted as long as Massachusetts
Kids Count 1996 is cited as the source.
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ENDNOTES
- The
Annie E. Casey Foundation, KIDS COUNT Data Book:
State Profiles of Child Well Being, 1995, p.154.
- Indicators
of Child Well-Being in the United States, 1985-1992.
The Applied Population Laboratory, University of
Wisconsin, Madison, December, 1995, p.52.
- Unpublished
data, National Kids Count, Annie E. Casey Foundation,
Baltimore, MD.
- "Massachusetts
Teen Birth Fact Sheet, 1994 update", Massachusetts
Department of Public Health, December, 1995.
- Advance
Data BIRTHS, 1994, Massachusetts Department of Public
Health, December, 1995, p.21.
- Gardner,
P, Hudson, BL. Advance report of final mortality
statistics, 1993. Monthly Vital Statistics Report;
vol 44 no 7, supp., p. 59, Hyattsville, MD: National
Center for Health Statistics, Feb. 29, 1996.
- Advance
Data BIRTHS, 1994, Massachusetts Department of Public
Health, December, 1995, p. 23 and 27.
- Blendon,
RJ, Swartz, K, Donelan, K. Massachusetts residents
without health insurance, 1995. Press release, August
11, 1995, table 1, p.4.
- The
Annie E. Casey Foundation, KIDS COUNT Data Book:
State Profiles of Child Well Being, 1995, p.145.
- Massachusetts
Children and Youth: a status report, vol 1. Massachusetts
Department of Public Health, January, 1995, p. 2.2.
- Massachusetts
Children and Youth: a status report, vol 1. Massachusetts
Department of Public Health, January, 1995, p.1.3.
- Unpublished
data, Statistical Information Office, Population
Division, U.S. Bureau of the Census.
- Advance
Data BIRTHS, 1994, Massachusetts Department of Public
Health, December, 1995, p.7.
- Unpublished
data, Statistical Information Office, Population
Division, U.S. Bureau of the Census.
- Unpublished
data, Massachusetts Institute of Social and Economic
Research, University of Massachusetts, Amherst,
MA.
- Unpublished
data, Massachusetts Department of Education, Bureau
of Data Collection, Feb. 27, 1996.
- The
Annie E. Casey Foundation, KIDS COUNT Data Book:
State Profile of Child Well-Being, 1995, Maryland,
1995, p.147.
- Massachusetts
Children and Youth: a status report, vol 1. Massachusetts
Department of Public Health, January, 1995, p. 2.2.
- Unpublished
data, Statistical Information Office, Population
Division, U.S. Bureau of the Census.
- Massachusetts
Department of Transitional Assistance, Facts and
Figures Report, December, 1994 and 1995. Calculations
by MCCY.
- Unpublished
data, Childrens Defense Fund, Washington, DC.
- Massachusetts
Department of Public Health, WIC Program, unpublished
data.
- EOHHS,
Division of Medical Assistance, Benefit Plan Enrollment,
One Day Snapshot, December 15, 1995.
- EOHHS,
Division of Medical Assistance, communication with
Louise Bannister.
- "Massachusetts
Teen Birth Fact Sheet, 1994 update", Massachusetts
Department of Public Health, December, 1995.
- Lakshmanan,
IAR. "Teenagers confront welfare rules,"
The Boston Globe, p.21, October 31, 1995. Advance
Data: BIRTHS, 1994, Massachusetts Department of
Public Health, December, 1995, p.5 and p.15.
- "Massachusetts
Teen Birth Fact Sheet, 1994 update", Massachusetts
Department of Public Health, December, 1995.
- "Massachusetts
Teen Birth Fact Sheet, 1994 update", Massachusetts
Department of Public Health, December, 1995.
- Adequacy
of prenatal care, based on the Kessner Index, takes
into account the trimester in which prenatal care
began, the number of prenatal visits, and gestational
age. For a woman to have adequate prenatal care,
she must have begun care in the first trimester
and had at least 9 prenatal visits.
- Advance
Data: BIRTHS, 1994, Massachusetts Department of
Public Health, December, 1995, p.39.
- Advance
Data: BIRTHS, 1994, Massachusetts Department of
Public Health, December, 1995, p.31.
- Advance
Data: BIRTHS, 1994, Massachusetts Department of
Public Health, December, 1995, p.40.
- Advance
Data: BIRTHS, 1994, Massachusetts Department of
Public Health, December, 1995, p.27.
- Massachusetts
Children and Youth: a status report, vol 1. Massachusetts
Department of Public Health, January, 1995, p.2.13.
- Blendon,
RJ, Swartz, K, Donelan, K. Massachusetts residents
without health insurance, 1995. Press release, August
11, 1995, table 1, p.4.
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