Showing posts with label North Dakota. Show all posts
Showing posts with label North Dakota. Show all posts

Monday, 11 July 2011

SIDS: American Indian infants suffer higher death rates

By: Patrick Springer, Forum Communications
July 04, 2011,
American Indian infants in North Dakota, South Dakota and Minnesota are roughly twice as likely to die as white infants — a disparity health officials bemoan as “unacceptably high.”
At the tender age of 1 month, the baby is vulnerable to infection — just the sort of pitfall Lutjens is trying to avoid through prevention and education, the front line of defense against infant mortality.
Babies like Wocekiya Oneroad are especially vulnerable.
That’s because American Indian infants in North Dakota, South Dakota and Minnesota are roughly twice as likely to die as white infants — a disparity health officials bemoan as “unacceptably high.”
Visiting nursing programs like those enabling Lutjens’ efforts on the Sisseton-Wahpeton reserva tion, seek to cure the stubborn problem.
The regular home visits, ideally starting before the child is born, blend assessment of risks and health status of mother and child with intensive health and safety education.
Oneroad first met Lutjens at a birthing class days before delivering Wocekiya, which means prayer in Dakota and is pronounced Woe-chee-yah. Reaching the one-month milestone, which coincided with Lutjens latest home visit on a recent day, was significant; 42 percent of infant deaths in South Dakota occur during the critical first month.
The nurse took out her stethoscope and listened to the baby breathe. The lungs were clear, also reassuring. And the mother reported there was no sign of infection, despite the running nose.
Still, Lutjens advised Oneroad, who is a member of the Sisseton-Wahpeton tribe, to keep monitoring her baby’s temperature and get her in to the doctor if she develops a fever.
“Just keep an eye on things,” she said.
Their first visit came after Oneroad spotted an advertisement for Lutjens’ birth preparation class, just days before Wocekiya was born. The breathing and relaxation techniques made her labor more tolerable.
“That really made a difference,” said Oneroad, 24, who also has a 5-year-old daughter. “The breathing really helped.”
First home visit
Days after the baby was born, Lutjens made her first home visit. At birth, Wocekiya weighed a healthy 9 pounds, 1 ounce. “She looked good,” Lutjens said. “She had a very good checkup,” adding her weight had grown to 10 pounds, 13 ounces.
American Indian infants often face greater risks than those of the general population. They are more likely to be born prematurely, have teenage mothers, grow up in poverty, or have a mother who smoked or used alcohol or other drugs during pregnancy.
Another major risk factor: going to sleep and not waking up.
SIDS, or sudden infant death syndrome, and other sleep-related causes, occur at higher rates for American Indians than the general population.
A Minnesota study of American Indian infant mortality attributed half of the reviewed deaths to SIDS or other sleep-related causes during 2005-2007, including being suffocated when the baby is sleeping in bed with a parent and suffocated when the mother or father rolls over the child during sleep.
To guard against that, Oneroad has been provided with a special infant bed that nestles next to her own, preventing the risk of the mother “overlaying” the baby in her sleep.
“With Toshina there’s not risk factors here,” Lutjens said. “She’s doing what she should be doing. She’s doing everything right.”
For her part, Oneroad appreciates the support and advice Lutjens brings with her visits.
“This is really nice,” she said. “With a newborn, it’s hard to get out. It’s nice having Jodi come here.”
Second mother
Mary Becker considered herself a second mother to the infant nephew she helped nurture.
“It really affected me,” she said. “I was in the room when he was born. I took care of him a lot. I tried to be the helpful aunt.”
So after the boy’s death four years ago from SIDS, she vowed to do everything possible to avoid the same fate when she had a child of her own.
That time came more than two years ago, and Becker decided to leave the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation in north-central North Dakota and move to Fargo.
She was 18 years old, and joined by her boyfriend, now her fiance. Both decided it would be easier to find work and housing in Fargo, where Becker had lived for a time with her father.
She also wanted to escape from an unhealthy family environment; her siblings had repeated their mother’s abuse of alcohol, and she didn’t want that contagion to spread to her child.
Program for mothers
A little more than two years ago, during a visit at the Family Healthcare Center in Fargo, she learned about a public health visiting nurse program for mothers who qualify according to income and other criteria.
She started on the program when she was five months pregnant.
“I’ve been with her ever since,” said Kara Scheer, a nurse with Fargo Cass Public Health’s Baby Steps Nurse-Family Partnership program.
On a recent rainy morning, Scheer met with Becker, 21, and her, Rockyboy Jr., 2. It was a graduation of sorts; this would be their last visit.
The nurse gave a glowing report card to mother and son.
“He’s just done amazing and she’s been amazing,” Scheer said. They’ve just done well through the whole process.”
As they sat on a sofa in Becker’s living room, with Rockyboy playing with wooden blocks, the nurse reviewed health and safety tips.
The Nurse-Family Partnership, a national program in use in both Cass and Clay counties, involves weekly in-home visits for up to 2½ years to guide first-time mothers through the critical period in child development.
The approach fosters good parenting skills and draws upon 30 years of evidence-based preventive health steps and education, with the nurse serving both as health professional and life coach.
On their last visit, Scheer takes final weight and height measurements. Rockyboy’s numbers fall squarely within the normal range.
As Toshina Oneroad found in Sisseton, having a nurse come into your home makes it easy to stay on track to keep the child healthy, Becker said.
“You’re in your own comfort zone,” she said. “You’re in your own home. I’ve learned so much,” including proper breastfeeding guidance and what to expect at each step of Rockyboy’s development.
“She actually taught me patience,” Becker added. “Between the program and the mother instincts kicking in, I could handle it.”
Baby Steps
Unfortunately, many American Indian mothers who have been in the Baby Steps visiting nurse program, who comprise 4 to 5 percent of the families served, have failed to finish, Scheer said. Many end up moving back to their home reservations.
Meanwhile, a collaboration between the White Earth and Fond du Lac Ojibwa bands in Minnesota could bring the Nurse-Family Partnership visiting nurse program to their reservations.
The two tribes have cooperated in a pilot study to adapt the national program, blending national standards and tailoring the approach to work better with Ojibwa culture.
So far, families have embraced the program. “Moms are engaging with that curriculum,” said Pat Butler, a nurse who manages the White Earth Home Health Agency.
Three nurses provide home visits for maternal and child health care, reaching between 40 and 50 families at a time.
Bringing the program to White Earth, located north of Detroit Lakes, Minn., is a priority of the tribe, Butler said.
“Your families are the future, guided by the elders,” she said.
If the Minnesota Ojibwe bands succeed in getting approval to modify the Nurse-Family Partnership program, they will become the first tribes to do so.
José Gonzalez, who directs a program of the Minnesota Health Department that works to end health disparities, said the collaboration between the White Earth and Fond du Lac bands is an example of how tribes are working to address infant mortality and other health problems.
The infant mortality rate for American Indians in Minnesota was 10.3 percent, compared to 4.4 percent for whites during 2001 to 2005, the most recent state comparison available.
Similar disparities were found in North Dakota and South Dakota, according to figures for 1999 to 2008 compiled by the Northern Plains Tribal Epidemiology Center, based in Rapid City, S.D.
In North Dakota, the infant mortality rate for American Indians is 11.9 percent, almost double the 6 percent rate for whites. In South Dakota, 13 percent of American Indian infants die, more than twice the 5.8 percent of whites.
North Dakota health officials are watching the experiment at Minnesota’s White Earth and Fond du Lac reservations.
“We’re aware of that pilot,” said Kim Mertz, director of the division of family health at the North Dakota Health Department. “We recognize we have to do a better job.”
Home visits
Nurse Jodi Lutjens started making maternal and child health home visits on the Sisseton-Wahpeton Dakota reservation three years ago.
She’s one of five visiting public health nurses with the Indian Health Service clinic in Sisseton, and the only one focusing on maternal and child health. She drove 14,000 miles to make her appointments last year.
Before Lutjens and several colleagues were hired, two visiting nurses tried to cover the entire service population, about half of the reservation’s 12,000 residents.
“I feel there’s been a big improvement in what I’ve seen,” she said, referring to infant mortality, which was 10.1 percent in Roberts County, the heart of the reservation, from 2000 to 2009.
“We’re still seeing infant deaths, but I’ve seen that number going down since I’ve been working here. We can’t prevent it entirely, but we can give education.”
Lutjens and her colleagues with the IHS collaborate with the tribe, including visiting home aides who can take mothers and children to their doctor’s visits.
As the nurse wraps up her visit with Oneroad, she remarks that she’s pleased that Wocekiya is eating well, and now weighs almost 11 pounds.
“This is just a case where mom and baby – they’re good,” she said. Then, turning to Oneroad, she adds, “We’ll be in touch.”
http://www.grandforksherald.com/event/article/id/208731/

Thursday, 3 March 2011

SBS: North Dakota: Harriet Feather

FARGO—United States Attorney Timothy Q Purdon announced that on February 14, 2011, Harriet Rose Feather, of Tokio, North Dakota, was sentenced before United States District Court Judge Ralph R Erickson on a charge of felony child abuse. Feather, 31, pleaded guilty on December 3, 2010, to beating her 4-year-old son with a plastic hanger until the hanger broke. The child suffered welts and severe bruising on his back. When interviewed by the emergency room doctor, the child stated that he did not know why he was beaten because he “was being a good boy.” The incident occurred in August of 2010 on the Spirit Lake Indian Reservation.
Feather was on supervised release for a previous child abuse conviction in 2005 for shaking an 18-month-old child so violently he suffered shaken baby syndrome. The medical bills were over $60,000 for the injures she inflicted on that child. Judge Erickson sentenced Feather to seven years in prison to be followed by three years of supervised release. Feather was ordered to pay a $100 special assessment to the Crime Victim's Fund.
Feather was also ordered to pay $2,869 in medical restitution. The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Bureau of Indian Affairs, and Spirit Lake Tribal Social Services. Assistant United States Attorney Janice M Morley prosecuted the case.
http://7thspace.com/headlines/373143/north_dakota_woman_sentenced_on_felony_child_abuse_charge.html

Tuesday, 22 February 2011

SBS: North Dakota: Harriet Rose Feather

February 15, 2011,


 U.S. Attorney Timothy Q. Purdon announced that on Feb. 14, Harriet Rose Feather of Tokio, N.D., was sentenced before U.S. District Court Judge Ralph R. Erickson on a charge of felony child abuse.
Feather, 31, pleaded guilty on Dec. 3, 2010, to beating her 4-year-old son.  The incident occurred in August 2010 on the Spirit Lake Indian Reservation.
Feather was on supervised release for a previous child abuse conviction in 2005 for shaking an 18-month-old child so violently he suffered shaken baby syndrome. The medical bills were more than $60,000 for the injures she inflicted on that child.
Erickson sentenced Feather to seven years in prison to be followed by three years of supervised release. Feather was ordered to pay a $100 special assessment to the Crime Victim's Fund.
Feather was also ordered to pay $2,869 in medical restitution.
The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Bureau of Indian Affairs and Spirit Lake Tribal Social Services.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Janice M. Morley prosecuted the case.
http://www.jamestownsun.com/event/article/id/129643/group/homepage/

Thursday, 23 September 2010

SBS: Blunt force trauma

Sep 10 2010
Amber Schatz
Bismarck
His actions took away his only son... and now... his freedom.The defense calls it a tragic accident... but today... a young man charged with murder faces the consequences of causing his baby's death.


"Just shy of his 21st birthday... 20-year-old Aarin Cratty will spend the next ten years behind bars... for the death of his 3 1/2 month old son, Hank At the sentence hearing... family members asked that he spend no time in jail... because he's been punished enough(Judge David Reich ) "This is a difficult case because it's a different type of murder case." That's the one thing everyone seems to agree on But arguments remain over baby Hank's actual cause of death last October(Burleigh County State's Attorney Richard Riha) "There is no doubt this child was shaken..." (Defense Attorney Travis Finck) "Here contrary to what the state's attorney portrayed it today, I don't think this was a shaken baby case, I don't believe the doctor believes it was a shaken baby case, it was a blunt force trauma." Aarin Cratty plead guilty to murder in June After weighing a pre-investigation report... and reading multiple letters on his behalf... The judge heard from his family members one last time (Aarin's mom Kristy) "He's been through hell already, I don't think there's anything more that anybody could possibly do to him to punish him for what was an accident." (Lori/Fiance/Hank's mother) "He's a really good guy, he wouldn't harm anybody." (Finck) "She's the one whose child was taken, Mr. Cratty's child was taken, and she's the one saying, it's an accident we can move on." Hank's mother, and Aarin's fiance, Lori says she has forgiven him for what happened But prosecutors say a toddler still died because of his actions...and there needs to be consequences... "I remember a few years ago there was an ad campaign, never never shake a baby, this is why you never shake a baby." (Riha) "people need to know you can't shake a child and get away with it." His defense attorney says it's a question of what the victims want...(Finck ) "the only real identifiable victims in this case, feel as if they're being penalized twice, they lost a grandson and a son, and now they're at risk of losing a son." (Aarin Cratty) "I guess I'd just like to reiterate to you that it was an accident, I'd never hurt my son on purpose, I don't think anyone would." (Amber Schatz/Reporting) "Recommendations ranged from 5 to seven years... up to 40 years in jail The judge says he decided on a middle ground between a murder and manslaughter sentence."Cratty's complete sentence is 25 years incarceration... all but 10 years of which will be suspended for a period of five years... during that five year period he will be on supervised probation.He also has to register as an offender against children
http://www.kxnet.com/getArticle.asp?ArticleId=628317