WEATHER AND CHILDBIRTH - A FURTHER SEARCH FOR RELATIONSHIPS

被引:14
作者
DRISCOLL, DM
机构
[1] Meteorology Department, Texas A and M University, College Station, 77840, TX
关键词
CHILDBIRTH; WEATHER; COLD FRONT; BAROMETRIC PRESSURE; PARTURITION;
D O I
10.1007/BF01208493
中图分类号
Q6 [生物物理学];
学科分类号
071011 ;
摘要
Previous attempts to find relationships between weather and parturition (childbirth) and its onset (the beginning of labor pains) have revealed, firstly, limited but statistically significant relationships between weather conditions much colder than the day before, with high winds and low pressure, and increased onsets; and secondly, increased numbers of childbirths during periods of atmospheric pressure rise (highly statistically significant). To test these findings, this study examined weather data coincident childbirth data from a hospital at Bryan-College Station, Texas (for a period of 30 cool months from 1987 to 1992). Tests for (1) days of cold fronts, (2) a day before and a day after the cold front, (3) days with large temperature increases, and (4) decreases from the day before revealed no relationship with mean daily rate of onset. Cold days with high winds and low pressure had significantly fewer onsets, a result that is the opposite of previous findings. The postulated relationship between periods of pressure rise and increased birth frequency was negative, i.e., significantly fewer births occurred at those times - again, the opposite of the apparent occurrence in an earlier study. The coincidence of diurnal variations in both atmospheric pressure and frequency of childbirths, was shown to account for fairly strong negative associations between the two variables. This same reasoning might explain the positive association found in an earlier study. A comparison has been made between childbirth and onset as the response variable, and the advantage is emphasized of using data from women whose labor is not induced.
引用
收藏
页码:152 / 155
页数:4
相关论文
共 8 条
[1]  
Berry F.A., 1945, HDB METEOROLOGY
[2]  
DRISCOLL DM, 1984, J INT SOC BIOMETEORO, V28, P211
[3]  
Driscoll DM, 1990, INT J ENVIRON STUD, V36, P19, DOI DOI 10.1080/00207239008710580
[4]  
REITER R, 1952, ZENTRALBLATT GYNOKOL, V6, P1605
[5]  
REYNOLDS SRM, 1971, TXB OBSTETRICS GYNEC
[6]  
SUTTON DH, 1945, MED J AUST 0601, P611
[7]  
TRAPASSO L, 1988, FEMALE PATIENT, V13, P33
[8]  
TRAPASSO LM, 1986, 17 IND STAT U DEP GE