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种族与收入交叉点上的压力源格局、出生体重和早产:通过模式化生活事件阐明出生背景。

Stressor landscapes, birth weight, and prematurity at the intersection of race and income: Elucidating birth contexts through patterned life events.

作者信息

Koning Stephanie M, Ehrenthal Deborah B

机构信息

Department of Population Health Sciences, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, 610 Walnut Street, 707 WARF Building, Madison, WI, 53726, USA.

Present Address: Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University, 1810 Hinman Avenue, Evanston, IL, 60208, USA.

出版信息

SSM Popul Health. 2019 Jul 23;8:100460. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2019.100460. eCollection 2019 Aug.

Abstract

Women of color and women in poverty experience disproportionately high rates of adverse birth outcomes in the United States (US). We use an intersectionality-based approach to examine how maternal life events (LE's) preceding childbirth are patterned and shape birth outcomes at the intersection of race and income. Using population data from the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System we uncover common maternal LE clusters preceding births in 2011-2015, offering a description and measurement of what we call "stressor landscapes" that go beyond standard measures by frequency or type alone. Three landscapes emerge: (1) Protected, characterized by very few LE's; (2) Illness/Isolated, with very few LE's and most commonly involving an illness or death of someone close; and (3) Toxic/Cumulative, comprising more frequent and acute LE's. Mothers in the toxic landscape experience on average 107-g lighter birth weights and a 27%, 49%, and 57% greater risk of PTB, LBW, and VLBW, respectively, compared to in the protected landscape. Low-income and non-Hispanic black (NHB), Hispanic, American Indian (AI), and Alaska Native (AN) mothers are among the groups disproportionately exposed to toxic stressor landscapes. The association between landscape and birth outcomes additionally varies by race and income. Among non-Hispanic white mothers, toxic landscapes are linked to poor birth outcomes at lower incomes. Among NHB mothers, illness-related stressors are additionally linked to worse outcomes and stressor landscapes disproportionately harm middle-income mothers. Toxic stressors may contribute to worse outcomes among middle- and high-income Hispanic and AI/AN mothers, but these patterns are less clear. Our study offers a new approach to measuring LE's that match common conceptions of exposure clustering and applies it to US population data to reveal LE patterns underlying persistent social disparities in maternal and child health.

摘要

在美国,有色人种女性和贫困女性经历不良分娩结局的比例极高。我们采用基于交叉性的方法,研究分娩前的孕产妇生活事件(LE)如何在种族和收入的交叉点上形成模式并影响分娩结局。利用妊娠风险评估监测系统的人口数据,我们发现了2011 - 2015年分娩前常见的孕产妇LE集群,提供了一种对我们所称的“压力源格局”的描述和衡量方法,这种方法超越了仅按频率或类型的标准衡量。出现了三种格局:(1)受保护型,特征是LE极少;(2)疾病/孤立型,LE极少且最常见的是涉及亲近之人的疾病或死亡;(3)有毒/累积型,包括更频繁和严重的LE。与受保护格局相比,处于有毒格局的母亲所生婴儿平均出生体重轻107克,早产、低体重和极低体重的风险分别高出27%、49%和57%。低收入以及非西班牙裔黑人(NHB)、西班牙裔、美国印第安人(AI)和阿拉斯加原住民(AN)母亲是不成比例地暴露于有毒压力源格局的群体。格局与分娩结局之间的关联还因种族和收入而异。在非西班牙裔白人母亲中,有毒格局与较低收入下的不良分娩结局相关。在NHB母亲中,与疾病相关的压力源还与更差的结局相关,且压力源格局对中等收入母亲的伤害不成比例。有毒压力源可能导致中等和高收入的西班牙裔以及AI/AN母亲出现更差的结局,但这些模式不太明显。我们的研究提供了一种新的方法来衡量LE,这种方法符合暴露聚类的常见概念,并将其应用于美国人口数据,以揭示母婴健康方面持续存在的社会差异背后的LE模式。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/f79a/6661410/40235070589c/gr1.jpg

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