Ahern J, Pickett K E, Selvin S, Abrams B
Center for Urban Epidemiologic Studies, New York Academy of Medicine, New York, NY 10029, USA.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2003 Aug;57(8):606-11. doi: 10.1136/jech.57.8.606.
Research shows that neighbourhood socioeconomic factors are associated with preterm delivery. This study examined whether cigarette smoking and individual socioeconomic factors modify the effects of neighbourhood factors on preterm delivery.
Case-control study.
Moffit Hospital in San Francisco, California.
417 African American and 1244 white women, including all preterm and a random selection of term deliveries 1980-1990, excluding non-singleton pregnancies, congenital anomolies, induced deliveries, and women transported for special care. US census data from 1980 and 1990 were used to characterise the women's neighbourhoods, defined as census tracts.
Cigarette smoking increased the risk of preterm delivery among both African American (OR=1.77, 95% confidence intervals (CI) (1.12 to 2.79)) and white women (OR=1.25, 95% CI (1.01 to 1.55)). However, cigarette smoking did not attenuate or modify the association of neighbourhood factors with preterm delivery. Among African American women, having public insurance modified the relation between neighbourhood unemployment and preterm delivery; among women without public insurance, the risk of preterm delivery was low in areas with low unemployment and high in areas with high unemployment, while among women with public insurance the risk of preterm delivery was highest at low levels of neighbourhood unemployment.
Cigarette smoking was associated with preterm delivery, especially among African Americans. Adverse neighbourhood conditions had an influence on preterm delivery beyond that of cigarette smoking. The effects of some neighbourhood characteristics were different depending on individual socioeconomic status. Examining socioeconomic and behavioural/biological risk factors together may increase understanding of the complex causes of preterm delivery.
研究表明社区社会经济因素与早产有关。本研究调查了吸烟和个体社会经济因素是否会改变社区因素对早产的影响。
病例对照研究。
加利福尼亚州旧金山的莫菲特医院。
417名非裔美国妇女和1244名白人妇女,包括1980年至1990年间所有早产妇女以及随机选取的足月分娩妇女,不包括多胎妊娠、先天性异常、引产以及因特殊护理而转诊的妇女。使用1980年和1990年的美国人口普查数据来描述这些妇女所在的社区,社区定义为普查区。
吸烟增加了非裔美国妇女(比值比[OR]=1.77,95%置信区间CI)和白人妇女(OR=1.25,95%CI(1.01至1.55))早产的风险。然而,吸烟并未减弱或改变社区因素与早产之间的关联。在非裔美国妇女中,拥有公共保险改变了社区失业率与早产之间的关系;在没有公共保险的妇女中,失业率低的地区早产风险低,失业率高的地区早产风险高,而在有公共保险的妇女中,社区失业率低时早产风险最高。
吸烟与早产有关,尤其是在非裔美国人中。恶劣的社区环境对早产的影响超过了吸烟。某些社区特征的影响因个体社会经济地位而异。综合研究社会经济和行为/生物风险因素可能会增加对早产复杂病因的理解。