Health & Fitness

How Well Off Are New Hampshire's Mothers And Children?

New Hampshire ranked #4 in the snapshot of health and well-being of women and children across the country, according to a new report.

NEW HAMPSHIRE — A new report shows New Hampshire has a low infant mortality rate and a low percentage of children in poverty when compared with other U.S. states.

The 2023 Health of Women and Children Report released earlier this month by United Health Care Foundation, the insurer’s nonprofit foundation, found that overall, maternal deaths, drug deaths among women and child injury deaths all trended upward. Teen births and vaping among high school students appear to be going down.

Overall, New Hampshire ranked #4 in the snapshot of health and well-being of women and children, based on an analysis of data from 34 distinct sources across 122 measures.

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Despite its strengths, New Hampshire is facing a unique set of challenges. The state has a high prevalence of anxiety among children, high prevalence of frequent mental distress among women, and and high foster care placement instability, data shows.

The analysis showed Minnesota, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire and Hawaii, respectively, are the healthiest states for women of childbearing age and children. Mississippi had the greatest opportunity to improve, followed by Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma and West Virginia.

Find out what's happening in Across New Hampshirefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The researchers noted several trends nationwide that they found troubling:

  • Maternal mortality, especially among racial and ethnic groups, increased 29 percent from 2014-2018 to 2017-2021.
  • The rate of drug deaths among women continued to climb, up 27 percent in 2019-2021 from 2016-2008.
  • The number of injury deaths among children 11 percent — an increase of roughly 3,800 deaths — between 2016-2018.
  • Despite a 10 percent increase in high health status among women — the percentage of women who reported that their health was very good or excellent — several mental and preventive health measures worsened. Frequent mental distress increased, and the number of women’s health providers decreased.
  • While there were some positive trends like declining teen births and reduced vaping among high schoolers, the overall landscape of youth health showed setbacks in early childhood education and broad disparities.

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