Gates-Williams J, Jackson M N, Jenkins-Monroe V, Williams L R
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco.
West J Med. 1992 Sep;157(3):350-6.
African-American women are twice as likely as women from other ethnic groups to have babies with low birth weights and to experience the loss of infant death. The problem is so endemic in black communities in Alameda County, California, that numerous programs have been developed over the past decade to reduce maternal risk factors and eliminate barriers to prenatal care. Despite these efforts, African-American ethnicity continues to be a major risk factor for infant mortality for reasons that are poorly understood. We take a critical look at 3 types of studies characteristic of infant mortality research: epidemiologic, studies that advocate prenatal care, and ethnomedical (cultural). We argue that the assumptions informing this research restrict the thinking about infant mortality and the political issues involved in how prevention programs are developed and structured. The persistent focus on maternal behavioral characteristics limits more in-depth analysis of the micropolitics of perinatal bureaucracies established in response to this ongoing crisis.
非裔美国女性生出低体重婴儿以及经历婴儿死亡的可能性是其他族裔女性的两倍。在加利福尼亚州阿拉米达县的黑人社区,这个问题非常普遍,以至于在过去十年里已经开展了许多项目来降低孕产妇风险因素并消除产前护理的障碍。尽管做出了这些努力,但由于人们对其原因了解甚少,非裔美国人的种族仍然是婴儿死亡率的一个主要风险因素。我们批判性地审视了婴儿死亡率研究中的三种典型研究类型:流行病学研究、倡导产前护理的研究以及民族医学(文化)研究。我们认为,这些研究所依据的假设限制了对婴儿死亡率以及预防项目的制定和结构所涉及的政治问题的思考。对孕产妇行为特征的持续关注限制了对为应对这场持续危机而建立的围产期官僚机构微观政治的更深入分析。