Department of Health Policy and Management, Los Angeles Fielding School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2020 Nov 21;17(22):8659. doi: 10.3390/ijerph17228659.
Housing insecurity is increasingly commonplace among disadvantaged women and children. We measured the individual- and population-level impact of severe housing insecurity during pregnancy on adverse birth and infant outcomes. We analyzed data from 3428 mother-infant dyads enrolled in the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study, a prospective cohort study representing births in 20 large U.S. cities from 1998 to 2000. Severe housing insecurity was defined as threatened eviction or homelessness during pregnancy. Outcomes included low birth weight and/or preterm birth, admission to a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) or stepdown facility, extended hospitalization after delivery, and infant health and temperament. We estimated exposure-outcome associations with risk ratios adjusted for pre-pregnancy maternal sociodemographic and heath factors and calculated a population attributable fraction (PAF) of outcomes attributable to severe housing insecurity. We found statistically significant associations between severe housing insecurity during pregnancy and low birth weight and/or preterm birth (risk ratio (RR] 1.73, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.28, 2.32), NICU or stepdown stay (RR 1.64, CI 1.17, 2.31), and extended hospitalization (RR 1.66, CI 1.28, 2.16). Associations between housing insecurity and infant fair or poor health (RR 2.62, CI 0.91, 7.48) and poor temperament (RR 1.52, CI 0.98, 2.34) were not statistically significant. PAF estimates ranged from 0.9-2.7%, suggesting that up to three percent of adverse birth and infant outcomes could be avoided by eliminating severe housing insecurity among low-income, pregnant women in US cities. Results suggest that housing insecurity during pregnancy shapes neonatal and infant health in disadvantaged urban families.
住房无保障在弱势妇女和儿童中越来越普遍。我们衡量了孕妇严重住房无保障对不良分娩和婴儿结局的个体和人群层面的影响。我们分析了 3428 对母婴对在脆弱家庭和儿童福利研究中的数据,这是一项前瞻性队列研究,代表了 1998 年至 2000 年美国 20 个大城市的分娩情况。严重住房无保障定义为怀孕期间面临被驱逐或无家可归的威胁。结果包括低出生体重和/或早产、新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)或降级设施入院、分娩后延长住院时间以及婴儿健康和气质。我们使用调整了孕前产妇社会人口统计学和健康因素的风险比来估计暴露-结果关联,并计算了归因于严重住房无保障的结果的人群归因分数(PAF)。我们发现,怀孕期间严重住房无保障与低出生体重和/或早产(风险比(RR)1.73,95%置信区间(CI)1.28,2.32)、NICU 或降级病房停留(RR 1.64,CI 1.17,2.31)和延长住院时间(RR 1.66,CI 1.28,2.16)之间存在统计学显著关联。住房无保障与婴儿健康状况一般或较差(RR 2.62,CI 0.91,7.48)和气质较差(RR 1.52,CI 0.98,2.34)之间的关联没有统计学意义。PAF 估计值在 0.9-2.7%之间,这表明在美国城市中,消除低收入孕妇的严重住房无保障,可能会避免高达 3%的不良分娩和婴儿结局。结果表明,孕妇怀孕期间的住房无保障会影响弱势城市家庭的新生儿和婴儿健康。