Prematurity is the leading killer of America's newborns.
Premature birth is birth that happens before 37 completed weeks of pregnancy. Babies who survive often have lifelong health problems, including
cerebral palsy, intellectual disabilities, chronic lung disease, blindness and
hearing loss.
In 2006, nearly 543,000 infants were born prematurely. In 2005, the United States as a society paid at least $26.2 billion in economic costs associated with preterm birth (medical and educational expenses and loss in productivity).
Preterm birth can happen to any pregnant woman. In about half of all cases, the causes are unknown.
The March of Dimes has taken on this devastating problem — to find out what causes it and how it can be stopped.
The March of Dimes Prematurity Campaign was launched on January 30, 2003. The Campaign has two goals:
- To raise public awareness of the problems of prematurity
- To decrease the rate of preterm birth in the United States
The Campaign:
- Funds research to find the causes of premature birth
- Encourages investment of public and private research dollars to identify causes and to identify and test promising interventions
- Educates women about risk-reduction strategies and the signs and symptoms of premature labor
- Provides information and emotional comfort to families affected by prematurity
- Advocates to expand access to health care coverage to improve maternity care and infant health outcomes
- Helps health care providers to improve risk detection and address risk factors
- Generates concern and action around the problem
- In 2004, the March of Dimes created the Prematurity Research Initiative, which funds promising, innovative research into the causes of prematurity. Nearly $17.4 million has been awarded to 55 grantees over the past 6 years, and the program has already produced promising discoveries.
- In 2005, the Institute of Medicine published the report Preterm Birth: Causes, Consequences, and Prevention. Funded in part by the March of Dimes, this report thoroughly documented the impact of premature birth on families, the health care system and business; it also provided the first cost estimates.
- In 2005, the March of Dimes initiated the PREEMIE (Prematurity Research Expansion and Education for Mothers Who Deliver Infants Early) Act. This act became law in 2006. It authorizes increased federal support for research and education on prematurity. Work continues on appropriation of funding to implement the act's provisions.
- In 2008, the first Surgeon General’s Conference on the Prevention of Preterm Birth was held. This conference was called for as part of the PREEMIE Act and brought together experts from the public and private sectors. March of Dimes staff and volunteers were key participants in each of the six work groups that developed goals for an action plan. The goals were presented to the Surgeon General at the conclusion of the conference. Achieving the goals of this plan requires both private and public resources for broad-based research, capacity building, data systems, creation of interventions, quality initiatives and a comprehensive communications strategy.
- In 2008, a March of Dimes board resolution extended the Prematurity Campaign to 2020 and established prematurity prevention as a global campaign.
- In 2009, the March of Dimes sponsored the Symposium on Quality Improvement to Prevent Prematurity. The Symposium brought together an interdisciplinary group to discuss quality improvement as an essential strategy to prevent prematurity. Attendees explored the state of quality initiatives and developed an action agenda to decrease the rate of preterm birth.
- In 2009, the March of Dimes issued the white paper The Global and Regional Toll of Preterm Birth. In 2005, an estimated 13 million babies worldwide were born preterm, almost 10 percent of total births worldwide. About 1 million deaths in the first month of life are attributable to preterm birth. Around the world, preterm birth takes a huge emotional, physical and financial toll.
Learn more about the progress and impact of the Prematurity Campaign.
For more than 70 years, the March of Dimes has saved millions of babies and children from death and disability through our lifesaving research and innovative programs, as well as the work of dedicated volunteers. The March of Dimes was founded in 1938 by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt to defeat polio, a dreaded disease that claimed the lives and limbs of America's children in record numbers. Within 17 years, the Salk vaccine was developed, and polio was defeated.
The March of Dimes then turned its attention to an even greater challenge — fighting birth defects and other infant health problems. With a track record of success in bringing people together to solve complex health challenges, the March of Dimes is uniquely qualified to take on the problem of premature birth.
Last updated September 2011