Policy Research Unit in Maternal Health and Care, National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit, Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Centre for Maternal and Child Health Research, School of Health Sciences, University of London, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2018 Apr 12;13(4):e0195146. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0195146. eCollection 2018.
We aimed to describe ethnic variations in infant mortality and explore the contribution of area deprivation, mother's country of birth, and prematurity to these variations.
We analyzed routine birth and death data on singleton live births (gestational age≥22 weeks) in England and Wales, 2006-2012. Infant mortality by ethnic group was analyzed using logistic regression with adjustment for sociodemographic characteristics and gestational age.
In the 4,634,932 births analyzed, crude infant mortality rates were higher in Pakistani, Black Caribbean, Black African, and Bangladeshi infants (6.92, 6.00, 5.17 and 4.40 per 1,000 live births, respectively vs. 2.87 in White British infants). Adjustment for maternal sociodemographic characteristics changed the results little. Further adjustment for gestational age strongly attenuated the risk in Black Caribbean (OR 1.02, 95% CI 0.89-1.17) and Black African infants (1.17, 1.06-1.29) but not in Pakistani (2.32, 2.15-2.50), Bangladeshi (1.47, 1.28-1.69), and Indian infants (1.24, 1.11-1.38). Ethnic variations in infant mortality differed significantly between term and preterm infants. At term, South Asian groups had higher risks which cannot be explained by sociodemographic characteristics. In preterm infants, adjustment for degree of prematurity (<28, 28-31, 32-33, 34-36 weeks) fully explained increased risks in Black but not Pakistani and Bangladeshi infants. Sensitivity analyses with further adjustment for small for gestational age, or excluding deaths due to congenital anomalies did not fully explain the excess risk in South Asian groups.
Higher infant mortality in South Asian and Black infants does not appear to be explained by sociodemographic characteristics. Higher proportions of very premature infants appear to explain increased risks in Black infants but not in South Asian groups. Strategies targeting the prevention and management of preterm birth in Black groups and suboptimal birthweight and modifiable risk factors for congenital anomalies in South Asian groups might help reduce ethnic inequalities in infant mortality.
本研究旨在描述婴儿死亡率的种族差异,并探讨地区贫困程度、母亲出生地和早产对这些差异的贡献。
本研究分析了 2006 年至 2012 年期间英格兰和威尔士的单胎活产(胎龄≥22 周)常规出生和死亡数据。采用 logistic 回归分析了不同种族组婴儿的死亡率,调整了社会人口特征和胎龄因素。
在分析的 4634932 例分娩中,巴基斯坦、加勒比黑种人、非洲黑人和孟加拉国婴儿的粗死亡率较高(分别为每 1000 例活产 6.92、6.00、5.17 和 4.40 例,而英国白人婴儿为 2.87 例)。调整母亲的社会人口特征后,结果变化不大。进一步调整胎龄后,加勒比黑种人(OR 1.02,95%CI 0.89-1.17)和非洲黑种人(1.17,1.06-1.29)的风险明显降低,但巴基斯坦(2.32,2.15-2.50)、孟加拉国(1.47,1.28-1.69)和印度(1.24,1.11-1.38)婴儿的风险并未降低。不同种族婴儿死亡率的差异在足月和早产婴儿中存在显著差异。在足月婴儿中,南亚群体的风险较高,这不能用社会人口特征来解释。在早产儿中,调整胎龄程度(<28、28-31、32-33、34-36 周)可完全解释黑人婴儿的风险增加,但不能解释巴基斯坦和孟加拉国婴儿的风险增加。进一步调整胎儿生长受限或排除先天性畸形相关死亡的敏感性分析并不能完全解释南亚群体的超额风险。
南亚和黑人婴儿的死亡率较高似乎不能用社会人口特征来解释。极早产儿比例较高可能解释了黑人婴儿的风险增加,但不能解释南亚群体的风险增加。针对黑人婴儿预防和管理早产以及改善南亚群体出生体重不足和可改变的先天性畸形风险因素的策略,可能有助于降低婴儿死亡率的种族差异。