2020 is a banner year for CelebrateOne, marking five years of collaborative work in the greater Columbus community.
This week, the City of Columbus CelebrateOne team celebrated this milestone with a virtual event that showcased the successes and highlighted the leaders, community partners, moms and teams engaged in helping babies thrive. It was followed by a press conference announcing the next phase of strategic planning to eliminate infant mortality.
In 2014, the Greater Columbus Infant Mortality Task Force released a report to the residents of Franklin County on the impact of infant mortality in our community. The report focused on eight recommendations to reduce the community’s staggering infant mortality rate by 40 percent and cut the racial health disparity gap in half by 2020. CelebrateOne, a coalition of committed community partners, was launched that November to carry out the Task Force’s recommendations and ensure Franklin County meets its ambitious goals.
“We successfully moved the needle from 8.4 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2014 to 6.9 deaths per 1000 in 2019. The next phase of our strategy will work toward the Healthy People 2030 goal of 5.0 infant deaths per 1,000 live births,” said Maureen Stapleton, Executive Director of CelebrateOne. “It is progress, but we still have work ahead of us. We will not eradicate infant mortality unless we bring everyone with us.” In 2019, Franklin County experienced one of the lowest number of sleep-related deaths in recent years at 15, an indication these efforts have an impact. Last year, CelebrateOne distributed 1,413 portable safe sleep cribs, educated over 900 Safe Sleep Ambassadors and implemented an impactful social and digital awareness campaign across Franklin County.
As CelebrateOne looks ahead, a critical area where our community needs progress is continuing to address the racial disparity in the infant mortality rate. The racial disparity ratio for our community still shows Non-Hispanic Black babies are passing away at more than two and a half times the rate of Non-Hispanic White babies. This next phase will be laser-focused on addressing racism as a health crisis and its impact on birth outcomes.
For more information, visit: Columbus.gov/celebrate-one/
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