Houston Chronicle

How Texas ranks on children’s health

- By Louis Jacobson POLITIFACT

The claim: “Let’s get this straight: (Texas is) a state that criminaliz­es abortion but ranks 50th in baby wellness checks, ranks 50th in clinical care for infants, ranks 50th in uninsured women, ranks 43rd in maternal mortality, ranks 44th in school funding per child, and ranks 46th in child hunger.” — Occupy Democrats social media post.

The post decried a new Texas law restrictin­g abortion, and the Supreme Court’s recent decision to let it take effect.

PolitiFact rating: Half-true. It was correct about the women’s health insurance rankings and school spending, and it

was close for child hunger. However, the most recent data shows that Texas is closer to the middle than to the bottom for baby wellness checks and maternal mortality. And a claim about clinical care for infants was unsupporte­d.

Discussion

Does Texas rank that low among states on all six of these measuremen­ts?

The post was correct on two of the measures, and close on another, but was wrong or unsupporte­d by current data on the other three. After our inquiries, Occupy Democrats changed its post to reflect our analysis.

50th in baby wellness checks: That’s incorrect

Texas ranks significan­tly higher than 50th, though it’s still below average.

Texas ranked 34th among the states in the percentage of children up to age 2 who had one or more preventive doctor visits during the previous 12 months, according to the National Survey of Children’s Health, conducted by the Department of Health and Human Services’ Maternal and Child Health Bureau in 2016 and 2017.

Texas ranked better by this measuremen­t than Alabama, Alaska, California, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Minnesota, Mississipp­i, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Wisconsin.

Rafael Rivero, a cofounder of Occupy Democrats, told PolitiFact that he may have intended to cite adolescent wellness checks. By that measure, Texas ranks 48th, above only South Dakota and Alaska.

50th in clinical care for infants: That’s unsupporte­d

We couldn’t find an exact metric for this, but Occupy Democrats cited a collection of rankings by the UnitedHeal­th Foundation, which included several metrics under the general heading “clinical care-infants.”

One of those metrics is for prenatal care, not clinical care for infants, and looks at the percentage of live births in which the mother began prenatal care between the first and sixth month of pregnancy, based on data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Texas was near the bottom, ranking 49th; only New Mexico was lower.

While prenatal care is important for the health of mothers and newborns, the ranking doesn’t support the claim about clinical care for infants.

50th for insured women: That’s correct

In 2019, Texas ranked dead last in health insurance coverage for women between the ages of 19 and 64, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. (Medicare kicks in at 65, so women over that age are all covered.)

All told, 23 percent of women in Texas are uninsured, about double the national rate.

43rd in maternal mortality: That’s based on old data

The most recent data we could find from the CDC, covering 2018, had Texas ranking 12th among the 25 states for which data was available. Texas’ rate was better than the rates in Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, New Jersey, New York, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Tennessee.

Rivero pointed to a ranking that showed Texas at 43rd, but it was based on a USA Today analysis that used earlier data, from 2012 to 2016.

44th in school funding per child: That’s correct

Census Bureau data shows that Texas ranked 44th in per-pupil spending for K-12 public school systems in 2019.

The six states that spent less were Arizona, Idaho, Mississipp­i, Nevada, Oklahoma and Utah.

46th in child hunger: That’s close

In Texas, 13.1 percent of households had either “low” or “very low” food security, averaged for the years of 2017, 2018 and 2019. That was tied for 40th with North Carolina. The states that ranked below Texas were Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississipp­i, New Mexico, Oklahoma and West Virginia.

As a postscript, Occupy Democrats changed its post to reflect our reporting. PolitiFact’s policy is to rate the original statement but to include in our article any subsequent correction­s or explanatio­ns by the speaker.

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