Halland Frode, Morken Nils-Halvdan, DeRoo Lisa A, Klungsøyr Kari, Wilcox Allen J, Skjærven Rolv
Departments of Global Public Health and Primary Care and Clinical Sciences, University of Bergen, the Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, Haukeland University Hospital, the Medical Birth Registry of Norway, and the Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Bergen, Norway; and the Epidemiology Branch, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences/National Institutes of Health, Durham, North Carolina.
Obstet Gynecol. 2015 Dec;126(6):1181-1187. doi: 10.1097/AOG.0000000000001155.
To assess the effects of socioeconomic factors on the association between parity and long-term maternal mortality.
This was a population-based cohort study of mothers with births registered in the Medical Birth Registry of Norway during the period 1967-2009. We estimated age-specific (40-69 years) cardiovascular and noncardiovascular mortality ratios by number of births using Cox proportional hazard models. To assess effect modification by mothers' attained education, we stratified on low (less than 11 years) and high (11 years or greater) educational level. We further evaluated fathers' mortality by number of births using the same analytical approach.
Mothers with low education had higher mortality (cardiovascular: hazard ratio 2.62, 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.34-2.93, noncardiovascular: hazard ratio 1.67, 95% CI 1.62-1.73). Among mothers with low education, cardiovascular mortality increased linearly with each additional birth above one (P trend=.02). In contrast, among mothers with high education, cardiovascular mortality declined with added births (P trend=.045). For noncardiovascular mortality there was no association among mothers with low education, whereas mortality declined with increasing number of births among mothers with high education (P trend<.01). Father's mortality showed similar associations with number of births when stratified on maternal education.
Women's long-term mortality rose with number of births only for cardiovascular causes of death and only among mothers with low education. Partners of women with low education had similar increasing risk with increasing number of births. Maternal educational level is a strong modifier of the association between parity and long-term mortality.
II.
评估社会经济因素对产次与孕产妇长期死亡率之间关联的影响。
这是一项基于人群的队列研究,研究对象为1967年至2009年期间在挪威医学出生登记处登记分娩的母亲。我们使用Cox比例风险模型,按产次估计特定年龄(40 - 69岁)的心血管疾病和非心血管疾病死亡率。为评估母亲受教育程度的效应修正作用,我们按低教育水平(少于11年)和高教育水平(11年及以上)进行分层。我们还使用相同的分析方法,按产次评估父亲的死亡率。
低教育水平的母亲死亡率更高(心血管疾病:风险比2.62,95%置信区间[CI] 2.34 - 2.93;非心血管疾病:风险比1.67,95% CI 1.62 - 1.73)。在低教育水平的母亲中,除头胎外,每增加一次生育,心血管疾病死亡率呈线性上升(P趋势 = 0.02)。相比之下,在高教育水平的母亲中,心血管疾病死亡率随生育次数增加而下降(P趋势 = 0.045)。对于非心血管疾病死亡率,低教育水平的母亲之间无关联,而高教育水平的母亲死亡率随生育次数增加而下降(P趋势<0.01)。按母亲教育程度分层时,父亲的死亡率与生育次数呈现相似的关联。
仅在心血管疾病死亡原因方面,且仅在低教育水平的母亲中,女性的长期死亡率随生育次数增加而上升。低教育水平女性的伴侣也有类似情况,即随着生育次数增加风险上升。母亲的教育水平是产次与长期死亡率之间关联的有力调节因素。
II级