Year Published: 1990

Author: Carolyne W. Arnold

After two decades of steady progress to reduce the rate of infant mortality in the U.S., the 1980s witnessed a dramatic reversal of this trend. This paper describes the problem of infant mortality in the context of national, state, and local population dynamics using Massachusetts as an example. It examines the extent to which the implementation of selected health and social policies of the Reagan administration contributed to the increase in the occurrence of infant deaths.

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