In spite of impressive declines in childhood mortality during the first half of the century, the infant mortality rate of the United States occupies an increasingly unfavorable place among those of nations whose over-all economic development is comparable during the past decade. The United States maternal and childhood mortality rates of the less-privileged segments of society occupy an increasingly unfavorable place compared with those of the more privileged.
These events are a reflection of the static or increasing proportion of the population which has not participated in the postwar affluence of the majority.
However, the existing structure, co-ordination, and administration of such services in the United States militates against such a possibility. More attention must be given to total social planning and the philosophical framework from which it derives.