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非洲难民女性的生殖健康结局:一项比较研究。

Reproductive Health Outcomes in African Refugee Women: A Comparative Study.

机构信息

1 School of Nursing, The State University of New York (SUNY), University at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York.

2 School of Social Work, The State University of New York (SUNY), University at Buffalo, Amherst, New York.

出版信息

J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2019 Jun;28(6):785-793. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2018.7314. Epub 2019 Feb 15.

Abstract

African refugee women in the United States are at risk of poor reproductive health outcomes; however, examination of reproductive health outcomes in this population remains inadequate. We compared: (1) prepregnancy health and prenatal behavior; (2) prenatal history and prenatal care utilization; and (3) labor and birth outcomes between African refugee women and U.S.-born Black and White women. A secondary data analysis of enhanced electronic birth certificate data was used. Univariate comparisons using chi-squared tests for dichotomous variables and analysis of variance and/or Kruskal-Wallis tests for continuous variables were conducted for Refugee versus Black versus White women. A -value <0.05 was considered statistically significant. From 2007 to 2016, 789 African refugee, 17,487 Black, and 59,615 White women in our population gave birth. African refugees experienced more favorable health outcomes than U.S.-born groups on variables examined. Compared to U.S.-born women, African refugee women had fewer prepregnancy health risks ( < 0.001), fewer preterm births ( < 0.001), fewer low birth weight infants ( < 0.001), and higher rates of vaginal deliveries ( < 0.001). These favorable outcomes occurred despite later initiation of prenatal care ( < 0.001) and lower scores of prenatal care adequacy among refugee women compared to U.S.-born groups ( < 0.001). The healthy immigrant effect appears to extend to reproductive health outcomes in our studied population of African refugee women. However, based on our data, targeted, culturally-congruent education surrounding family planning and prenatal care is recommended. Insight from reproductive health care experiences of African refugee women can provide understanding of the protective factors contributing to the healthy immigrant effect in reproductive health outcomes, and knowledge gained can be utilized to improve outcomes in other at-risk groups.

摘要

美国的非洲难民女性面临不良生殖健康结果的风险;然而,对这一人群的生殖健康结果的检查仍然不足。我们比较了:(1)孕前健康和产前行为;(2)产前史和产前保健利用;以及(3)分娩和分娩结果,比较了非洲难民女性与美国出生的黑人和白人女性。使用增强型电子出生证明数据进行了二次数据分析。使用卡方检验(用于二分类变量)和方差分析和/或 Kruskal-Wallis 检验(用于连续变量)对难民与黑人与白人妇女进行了单变量比较。统计显著值为 a-值 <0.05。2007 年至 2016 年,我们的人群中有 789 名非洲难民、17487 名黑人以及 59615 名白人妇女分娩。与美国出生的群体相比,非洲难民在检查的变量上经历了更有利的健康结果。与美国出生的女性相比,非洲难民女性的孕前健康风险较低(<0.001),早产率较低(<0.001),低出生体重婴儿较少(<0.001),阴道分娩率较高(<0.001)。尽管与美国出生的群体相比,难民女性开始产前保健的时间较晚(<0.001),且产前保健充足率较低(<0.001),但仍出现了这些有利的结果。在我们研究的非洲难民女性人群中,健康移民效应似乎扩展到生殖健康结果。然而,根据我们的数据,建议针对计划怀孕和产前保健提供有针对性的、文化上一致的教育。对非洲难民女性生殖健康护理经验的了解可以深入了解导致生殖健康结果中健康移民效应的保护因素,并且获得的知识可以用于改善其他高危人群的结果。

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Reproductive Health Outcomes in African Refugee Women: A Comparative Study.非洲难民女性的生殖健康结局:一项比较研究。
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