Updated
Updated · Medscape · Jun 19
Study Finds Female Newborns 2 Times More Likely to Miss Vitamin K as Refusals Rise
Updated
Updated · Medscape · Jun 19

Study Finds Female Newborns 2 Times More Likely to Miss Vitamin K as Refusals Rise

1 articles · Updated · Medscape · Jun 19

Summary

  • 93,163 newborns studied across three University of Pennsylvania hospitals showed female infants had higher odds of missing vitamin K prophylaxis than males, with an adjusted odds ratio of 2.03.
  • 777 newborns did not receive vitamin K and 9,400 did not receive hepatitis B vaccine during the hospital stay, indicating refusals extended beyond a single preventive treatment.
  • Among infants whose parents declined vitamin K, 83% also did not receive hepatitis B vaccine, linking the two refusals closely in the same families.
  • From 2018 to 2025, vitamin K refusal rates rose annually by 1.37 per 1,000 female births and 0.75 per 1,000 male births, while HBV refusal also increased for both sexes.
  • The JAMA Network Open research letter was limited to one health system and did not track later health outcomes, but authors said the pattern points to a need for strategies to reduce preventable risk.

Insights

With CDC guidelines now relaxed, are US newborns on the brink of a surge in preventable, deadly diseases?
What unspoken beliefs are leading parents to deny daughters the same life-saving care they accept for their sons?