Dayton Daily News

Leaders to discuss high infant mortality

Religious groups to meet with state officials in Toledo.

- By Lauren Lindstrom

Representa­tives of Gov. John Kasich’s Office of FaithBased and Community Initiative­s are planning to come to Toledo to discuss with community leaders ways to reduce the area’s infant mortality rate.

This meeting will be an opportunit­y to invite and educate leaders of Toledo-area religious organizati­ons to take action in reducing infant mortality, said Sandy Oxley, chief of maternal child and family health for the Ohio Department of Health.

“We know that the faith community can reach individual­s in a way that government­al entities can’t,” she said. “They can serve as credible messengers (of informatio­n).” Representa­tives from the Ohio Department of Medicaid and Ohio Department of Health will also participat­e in the discussion.

Infant mortality rates, or how many babies die before their first birthdays per 1,000 live births, have been consistent­ly high here.

Lucas County’s black infant mortality rate was 14.2 in 2016, compared with 5.0 for white infants, according to the Ohio Department of Health. Premature birth, birth defects, and sleep-related issues are the top three causes of infant death in Ohio.

The Toledo-Lucas County metro area was one of nine identified by the state for increased interventi­on because of high infant mortality rates. The Ohio Equity Institute is a partnershi­p between the Ohio Department of Health and nine local health department­s in Butler, Cuyahoga, Franklin, Hamilton, Lucas, Mahoning, Montgomery, Stark, and Summit counties.

In Lucas County, those efforts are headed by the health department and the Hospital Council of Northwest Ohio.

Bringing faith-based organizati­ons into the conversati­on about infant mortality is crucial, said Celeste Smith, community and minority health supervisor at the Toledo-Lucas County Health Department.

“We have done a really good job, involving profession­als, social service agencies and the hospitals,” she said, but have not yet engaged clergy on a larger scale. “The community looks up to them, and we need to use them to help decrease disparitie­s.”

The event, originally planned for Friday, has been canceled due to winter storms, though a make-up date has not been announced.

 ?? THE (TOLEDO) BLADE 2016 ?? Celeste Smith of the Toledo-Lucas County Health Department said faith-based groups could help lower the area’s high infant mortality rate.
THE (TOLEDO) BLADE 2016 Celeste Smith of the Toledo-Lucas County Health Department said faith-based groups could help lower the area’s high infant mortality rate.

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