Missouri continues to lag behind most states in children's health, report finds
(Rebecca Rivas/Missouri Independent).
Missouri ranked in the bottom third of all states for children's health, according to a report released Monday — due in part to a high rate of child and teen deaths.
The annual Kids Count Data Book from the Annie E. Casey Foundation, which used data from 2023, evaluated all states on four metrics of child well-being: health, economic well-being, education, and family and community.
Missouri ranked near the middle of states for overall child well-being, at 27th out of 50, weighed down by poor performance in health and education.
Missouri's rankings in the four categories were:
13th in economic well-being,
33rd in education,
35th in health
And 25th in family & community.
'Children's health remains an area of concern,' noted a press release Monday from Family and Community Trust, the Missouri-based nonprofit partner to Kids Count.
Only nine states had higher rates of child and teen deaths in 2023 than Missouri, one of the factors considered in the health ranking. (Those were: Mississippi, Louisiana, New Mexico, Alabama, Tennessee, Arkansas, Alaska, Oklahoma and Montana.)
Missouri generally ranks among the states with the highest rate of firearm deaths for kids. Firearms became the leading cause of kids' deaths in the United States in 2020, surpassing car accidents.
While the national average in 2023 was 29 child and teen deaths per 100,000, that number was 37 deaths per 100,000 in Missouri.
The national average rose overall in 2023. The report notes that while covid deaths contributed to the increase, the rise was largely due to rising firearm deaths and drug overdoses, particularly among teens ages 15 to 19.
Also bringing Missouri's health ranking down: Missouri's rate of low-birth weight babies increased in 2023 from 2019 and is above the national average.
Other factors helped Missouri's score. For one, Missouri has seen major improvements in children's insurance coverage since the state implemented Medicaid expansion in 2021. The rate of uninsured kids fell from 7% in 2019 to 5% in 2023, which is now on par with the national average.
Nationally, Missouri saw among the sharpest declines in uninsured people overall from 2019 to 2023 with the expansion of Medicaid.
Those gains could be threatened by Congress' budget proposal to reduce Medicaid spending in part by imposing more barriers to care.
Teen births in the state have gone down, in line with national trends — though the state's average is still above the national one.
The rate of overweight or obese kids has also improved in Missouri and is down to 31% of kids in 2023, on par with the national average.
The rate of kids in poverty declined to 14% in the state in 2023, below the 16% national average.
Missouri's education ranking slipped in recent years.
In 2023, 77% of Missouri eighth graders were not proficient at math, according to the report, which is nearly 10 percentage points worse than 2019 and is worse than the national average.
The press release from Family and Community Trust said the data show a 'continuing need to invest in education in Missouri.'
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