L. Douglas Wilder School of Public of Government and Public Affairs, Virginia Commonwealth University, 1808 Gordon Ave., Richmond, VA, 23224, USA.
Sandra Rosenbaum School of Social Work, Institute for Research on Poverty, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1350 University Ave, Madison, WI, 53706, USA.
Matern Child Health J. 2024 Aug;28(8):1386-1394. doi: 10.1007/s10995-024-03941-3. Epub 2024 Jun 7.
To assess the association between air pollution exposure and housing context during pregnancy and adverse birth outcomes.
We linked air pollution data from the Environmental Protection Agency and housing data from the American Community Survey with birth records from Wisconsin counties over a 9-year period. We calculated average daily pregnancy exposure to fine particulate matter and ozone and modeled its relationship to preterm birth, low birthweight and NICU admission, adjusting for individual characteristics and housing context.
Ozone exposure and housing cost-burden had substantive and statistically significant negative associations with birthweight and gestational age, and positive associations with NICU admission, while a poor-quality housing environment had a significant negative effect on weeks of gestation. Fine particulate matter exposure had a negligible correlation with these outcomes.
An additional tenth of one part-per-million daily average exposure to ozone is associated with a 33 g decrease in birthweight. This decrease in birthweight is about the same size as the association of gestational diabetes (32 g), larger than the association of chronic hypertension (22 g), and about 40% the size of the effect of smoking during pregnancy on birthweight (84 g). Given the magnitudes of the associations with atmospheric ozone and adverse birth outcomes, reducing atmospheric ozone should be a public health priority. Inclusion of controls for housing cost-burden and poor-quality housing reduces the magnitude of the association with mothers who identify as Black, suggesting the importance of these structural factors in understanding adverse birth outcomes by race.
评估孕期暴露于空气污染和居住环境与不良出生结局之间的关联。
我们将环境保护署的空气污染数据与美国社区调查的住房数据与威斯康星州县的出生记录联系起来,在 9 年的时间里进行了分析。我们计算了孕妇每日暴露于细颗粒物和臭氧的平均水平,并对早产、低出生体重和新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)入院率进行了模型分析,调整了个体特征和住房环境因素。
臭氧暴露和住房费用负担与出生体重和胎龄呈显著负相关,与 NICU 入院率呈正相关,而居住环境质量差与胎龄周数呈显著负相关。细颗粒物暴露与这些结果之间存在微弱的相关性。
每天额外暴露于百万分之一十分之三的臭氧,会导致出生体重降低 33 克。这种出生体重的下降与妊娠糖尿病(32 克)的相关性大致相同,大于慢性高血压(22 克)的相关性,约为怀孕期间吸烟对出生体重影响的 40%(84 克)。考虑到与大气臭氧和不良出生结局的关联程度,减少大气臭氧应成为公共卫生的优先事项。纳入住房费用负担和住房质量差的控制因素,可以降低与黑人母亲相关的关联程度,这表明这些结构性因素对于理解种族不良出生结局的重要性。