Kozhimannil Katy Backes, Attanasio Laura B, Johnson Pamela Jo, Gjerdingen Dwenda K, McGovern Patricia M
Division of Health Policy and Management, University of Minnesota School of Public Health, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Division of Health Policy and Management, University of Minnesota School of Public Health, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Womens Health Issues. 2014 Sep-Oct;24(5):469-76. doi: 10.1016/j.whi.2014.06.010.
Rising rates of labor induction and cesarean delivery, especially when used without a medical reason, have generated concern among clinicians, women, and policymakers. Whether employment status affects pregnant women's childbirth-related care is not known. We estimated the relationship between prenatal employment and obstetric procedures, distinguishing whether women reported that the induction or cesarean was performed for medical reasons.
Using data from a nationally representative sample of women who gave birth in U.S. hospitals (n = 1,573), we used propensity score matching to reduce potential bias from nonrandom selection into employment. Outcomes were cesarean delivery and labor induction, with and without a self-reported medical reason. Exposure was prenatal employment status (full-time employment, not employed). We conducted separate analyses for unmatched and matched cohorts using multivariable regression models.
There were no differences in labor induction based on employment status. In unmatched analyses, employed women had higher odds of cesarean delivery overall (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 1.45; p = .046) and cesarean delivery without medical reason (AOR, 1.94; p = .024). Adding an interaction term between employment and college education revealed no effects on cesarean delivery without medical reason. There were no differences in cesarean delivery by employment status in the propensity score-matched analysis.
Full-time prenatal employment is associated with higher odds of cesarean delivery, but this association was not explained by socioeconomic status and no longer existed after accounting for sociodemographic differences by matching women employed full time with similar women not employed during pregnancy.
引产和剖宫产率不断上升,尤其是在无医学指征的情况下使用时,已引起临床医生、女性及政策制定者的关注。就业状况是否会影响孕妇的分娩相关护理尚不清楚。我们评估了产前就业与产科手术之间的关系,区分了女性报告引产或剖宫产是否有医学原因。
利用美国医院中分娩女性的全国代表性样本数据(n = 1573),我们采用倾向得分匹配法来减少因非随机选择就业而产生的潜在偏倚。结局指标为剖宫产和引产,有无自我报告的医学原因。暴露因素为产前就业状况(全职工作、未就业)。我们使用多变量回归模型对未匹配和匹配队列进行了单独分析。
引产情况在就业状况方面无差异。在未匹配分析中,就业女性总体剖宫产几率较高(调整优势比[AOR],1.45;p = 0.046),无医学原因的剖宫产几率较高(AOR,1.94;p = 0.024)。在就业与大学教育之间添加交互项后,未发现对无医学原因的剖宫产有影响。倾向得分匹配分析中,就业状况对剖宫产无差异。
产前全职工作与剖宫产几率较高相关,但这种关联无法用社会经济地位来解释,在将孕期全职工作的女性与孕期未就业的类似女性进行匹配以消除社会人口学差异后,这种关联不再存在。