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跨代传递:德国土耳其裔移民健康差异研究——多中心队列研究方案(BaBi-stress 和 BaBeK 研究)

Intergenerational transmission of health disparities among Turkish-origin immigrants in Germany: study protocol of a multi-centric cohort study (BaBi-stress and BaBeK study).

机构信息

Department of Public Health, Brandenburg University of Technology, Universitätsplatz 1, 01968, Senftenberg, Germany.

Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, corporate member of Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, and Berlin Institute of Health (BIH), Institute for Medical Psychology, Luisenstr. 57, Berlin, 10117, Germany.

出版信息

BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2020 Mar 12;20(1):158. doi: 10.1186/s12884-020-2853-y.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Immigrants in Germany exhibit higher levels of social disadvantage when compared to the non-immigrated population. Turkish-origin immigrants constitute an important immigrant group in Germany and show disparities in some health domains that are evident from birth onwards. Several studies have shown the mechanisms by which social disadvantage is biologically embedded to affect health over the lifespan. Relatively little, however, is still known about if and how the maternal social situation is transmitted to the next generation. This study therefore aims to analyse the effects of maternal socioeconomic status and migration status on stress-related maternal-placental-fetal (MPF) biological processes during pregnancy on infant birth and health outcomes.

METHODS

This longitudinal cohort study of N = 144 child-mother dyads is located at two study sites in Germany and includes pregnant women of Turkish origin living in Germany as well as pregnant German women. During pregnancy, MPF stress biology markers from maternal blood and saliva samples, maternal socio-economic and migration-related information, medical risk variables and psychological well-being are assessed. After birth, infant anthropometric measures and developmental outcomes are assessed. The same measures will be assessed in and compared to Turkish pregnant women based on a collaboration with BABIP study in Istanbul.

DISCUSSION

This is the first study on intergenerational transmission of health disparities in Germany with a focus on women of Turkish-origin. The study faces similar risks of bias as other birth cohorts do. The study has implemented various measures, e.g. culturally sensitive recruitment strategies, attempt to recruit and follow-up as many pregnant women as possible independent of their social or cultural background. Nevertheless, the response rate among lower-educated families is lower. The possibility to compare results with a cohort from Turkey is a strength of this study. However, starting at different times and with slightly different recruitment strategies and designs may result in cohort effects and may affect comparability of the sub-cohorts.

TRIAL REGISTRATION

N.A. (Observational study, no clinical trial, no interventions on human participants).

摘要

背景

与非移民人口相比,德国的移民表现出更高水平的社会劣势。土耳其裔移民是德国的一个重要移民群体,他们在一些健康领域存在差异,这些差异从出生时就很明显。一些研究已经表明了社会劣势是如何通过生物学机制在整个生命周期中影响健康的。然而,相对较少的研究仍然不知道母亲的社会状况是否以及如何传递给下一代。因此,本研究旨在分析母亲的社会经济地位和移民地位对怀孕期间与压力相关的母婴胎盘(MPF)生物学过程对婴儿出生和健康结果的影响。

方法

这项位于德国两个研究地点的 N=144 对母婴对子的纵向队列研究包括居住在德国的土耳其裔怀孕妇女和德国怀孕妇女。在怀孕期间,从母亲的血液和唾液样本中评估母婴胎盘生物压力标记物、母亲的社会经济和移民相关信息、医疗风险变量和心理健康状况。出生后,评估婴儿的身体测量和发育结果。根据与伊斯坦布尔 BABIP 研究的合作,将对土耳其孕妇进行相同的评估和比较。

讨论

这是德国第一项关注土耳其裔妇女的代际传递健康差异的研究。该研究面临与其他出生队列相同的偏倚风险。该研究已经实施了各种措施,例如文化敏感的招募策略,试图招募和跟踪尽可能多的孕妇,无论她们的社会或文化背景如何。然而,受教育程度较低的家庭的回应率较低。能够将结果与来自土耳其的队列进行比较是这项研究的一个优势。然而,从不同的时间开始,采用略有不同的招募策略和设计可能会导致队列效应,并可能影响子队列的可比性。

试验注册

无(观察性研究,无临床试验,无人类参与者干预)。

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