Low Birth Weight Across Generations

被引:49
作者
James W. Collins
Richard J. David
Nikhil G. Prachand
Michelle L. Pierce
机构
[1] Northwestern University,Department of Pediatrics, Children's Memorial Hospital, Feinberg School of Medicine
[2] University of Illinois Medical School,Department of Pediatrics, Cook County Hospital
关键词
African American; health disparity; intergenerational; low birth weight; prenatal care;
D O I
10.1023/A:1027371501476
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Objectives: This study sought to determine the relationship between maternal birth weight, prenatal care usage, and infant birth weight. Methods: Stratified and logistic regression analyses were performed on a dataset of computerized Illinois vital records of White (N = 187,074) and African-American (N = 58,856) infants born between 1989 and 1991 and their mothers born between 1956 and 1975. Results: Among White mothers who received adequate prenatal care, the low birth weight (<2500 g) rate was 4% for infants of former low birth weight mothers (N = 5230) compared to 2.1% for infants of former nonlow birth weight mothers (N = 93,011), relative risk equaled 1.9(1.7–2.2); the population attributable risk of maternal low birth weight was 4.1%. Among African American mothers who received adequate prenatal care, the low birth weight rate was 15% for infants of former low birth weight mothers (N = 2196) compared to 7.2% for infants of former nonlow birth weight mothers (N = 14,607), relative risk equaled 2.1(1.9–2.4); the population attributable risk of maternal low birth weight was 10.9%. The maternal–infant birth weight associations were consistent across all maternal age, education, marital status, and prenatal care categories. Conclusions: Maternal low birth weight is a risk factor for infant low birth weight independent of risk status during the current pregnancy. A greater percentage of low birth weight African American (compared to White) infants are attributable to maternal low birth weight.
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页码:229 / 237
页数:8
相关论文
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