Dos Santos Angélica Carreira, Brentani Alexandra, Fink Günther
Department of Pediatrics, University of São Paulo Medical School, Av. Dr. Enéas Carvalho de Aguiar, 647, São Paulo, CEP-01246-904, Brazil.
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health University of Basel, Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, Switzerland.
BMC Public Health. 2021 May 5;21(1):865. doi: 10.1186/s12889-021-10900-y.
Low birth weight and prematurity remain leading causes of infant mortality and morbidity globally. Although extensive literature has highlighted the importance of socioenvironmental characteristics for birth outcomes, the role of indirect violence on health remains fairly understudied.
Using geocoded birth records from the ongoing Western Region Birth Cohort (Região Oeste Coorte - ROC-Cohort) of infants born between 2012 and 2014 and geocoded crime reports, we assessed the associations between exposure to violent crimes during pregnancy within a 1-km radius of the mother's residence and low birth weight, preterm delivery, and being born small-for-gestational-age. Violent crime exposure was categorized into quintiles. Multivariate logistic regressions were used to examine the associations between violence exposure and birth outcomes. Models were adjusted for sex, maternal age and education, socioeconomic status, and risk factors such as hypertension, diabetes, smoking, and drinking during pregnancy.
Among the 5268 children included, the average crime exposure during the first two trimesters of pregnancy ranged from 0.44 violent crimes in the least exposed quintile to 12.74 crimes in the most exposed. Compared to children with the lowest violence exposure, children in the highest exposure quintile had higher odds of being born small-for-gestational-age (1.41[1.06-1.89]), preterm (1.35[1.01-1.80]), and low birth weight (1.42[1.03-1.98]). While socioeconomic status and maternal education were positively associated with lower violence exposure, no associations were found between these characteristics and birth outcomes.
Higher exposure to violent crimes in the close vicinity of pregnant women's residence is associated with substantial increases in the odds of adverse birth outcomes. Policies to improve neighborhood safety can potentially contribute not only to the short-term wellbeing of populations but may also have large social, economic, and health benefits in the long term.
低出生体重和早产仍然是全球婴儿死亡和发病的主要原因。尽管大量文献强调了社会环境特征对出生结局的重要性,但间接暴力对健康的作用仍未得到充分研究。
利用2012年至2014年间出生的婴儿的地理编码出生记录(来自正在进行的西部地区出生队列研究,即ROC队列)以及地理编码犯罪报告,我们评估了母亲居住地址1公里范围内孕期暴露于暴力犯罪与低出生体重、早产和小于胎龄儿出生之间的关联。暴力犯罪暴露情况分为五个五分位数组。采用多因素logistic回归分析来研究暴力暴露与出生结局之间的关联。模型对性别、母亲年龄和教育程度、社会经济地位以及孕期高血压、糖尿病、吸烟和饮酒等风险因素进行了校正。
在纳入的5268名儿童中,孕期前两阶段的平均犯罪暴露次数从暴露最少的五分位数组中的0.44次暴力犯罪到暴露最多的五分位数组中的12.74次犯罪不等。与暴力暴露最低的儿童相比,暴露最高的五分位数组中的儿童出现小于胎龄儿出生(比值比[OR]=1.41[1.06 - 1.89])、早产(OR = 1.35[1.01 - 1.80])和低出生体重(OR = 1.42[1.03 - 1.98])的几率更高。虽然社会经济地位和母亲教育程度与较低的暴力暴露呈正相关,但未发现这些特征与出生结局之间存在关联。
孕妇居住地址附近暴力犯罪暴露程度较高与不良出生结局几率大幅增加有关。改善社区安全的政策不仅可能有助于人群的短期福祉,从长远来看还可能带来巨大的社会、经济和健康效益。