ย In recognition of Black History Month, the March of Dimes is drawing attention to the tremendous gap in preterm birth and infant mortality rates that disproportionately affect black women in the United States and to the programs and research designed to reduce โ€“ and one day eliminate โ€“ these disparities.

ย Black women have the highest preterm birth and infant mortality rates of all racial groups. The preterm birth rate for black women averaged 17.6 percent, compared to the national average of 12.3 between 2002 and 2004. Infant mortality rates for blacks averaged 13.5 percent compared to the national average of 6.9 between 2002 and 2004.ย ย ย  In Maryland the infant mortality rate for black infants was 13.3 percent.

ย โ€œThe March of Dimes is working to ensure that all babies have an equal opportunity for a healthy start in life,โ€ said Dr. Diane Ashton, deputy medical director at the March of Dimes. โ€œTo achieve this goal, we need help to spread the word, to educate, and to call for resources and programs that can make a difference for the health of our black communities and for the nation as a whole.โ€

ย To address disparities in infant health outcomes, the March of Dimes works with community-based organizations to provide public health focused services, distribute maternal and infant health information and support scientific research.

ย Beginning this month, the March of Dimes is partnering with the federal Office of Minority Health Resource Center to support the โ€œA Healthy Baby Begins With Youโ€ program, an educational campaign to raise awareness about the high infant mortality rates in the African-American population. Select March of Dimes chapters will participate in health fairs, distributing information women need before they become pregnant to help them have a healthy baby. Tonya Lewis Lee, author, producer and wife of filmmaker Spike Lee, is the campaign spokesperson and members of Behind the Bench, the National Basketball Wives Association also will act as spokespersons for the campaign.

ย The March of Dimes has a long history of working within communities to address health problems. For nearly 30 years, the March of Dimes has partnered with Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity and Zeta Phi Beta sorority. March of Dimes chapters have worked with Alpha Phi Alpha to implement Project Alphaยฎ events and in 2006, the program provided information about teen pregnancy prevention to more than 4,500 young men.

ย Since 1972 Zeta Phi Beta and the March of Dimes have operated Storkโ€™s Nestsยฎ programs reaching underserved and predominantly black women. In 2006 the sorority and the March of Dimes operated 390 Storks Nests, providing more than 20,000 women with prenatal care education, maternity and infant clothes, and furniture at low or no cost. In collaboration with the Zetaโ€™s, the March of Dimes began offering annual Prematurity Awareness Weekends in 2003 and each year reach 100,000 people at more than 150 churches.

ย The March of Dimes has committed more than $11 million to its Prematurity Research Initiative grant program, which supports research to identify factors that may help explain why black women have a higher rate of premature birth. One example is ongoing research by Dr. Jerome F. Strauss III, dean of the Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine, which has linked certain genetic variations in the production and breakdown of the protein collagen with preterm premature rupture of the membranes (PPROM). This research may help to identify factors that contribute to the disparity between black and white