Rebouças Poliana, Paixão Enny S, Ramos Dandara, Pescarini Julia, Pinto-Junior Elzo Pereira, Falcão Ila R, Ichihara Maria Yury, Sena Samila, Veiga Rafael, Ribeiro Rita, Rodrigues Laura C, Barreto Maurício L, Goes Emanuelle F
Center for Data and Knowledge Integration for Health (CIDACS), Gonçalo Moniz Institute, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Salvador, Bahia, Brazil.
Maternal, Adolescent, Reproductive & Child Health (MARCH) Centre, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Lancet Reg Health Am. 2024 Jul 5;37:100833. doi: 10.1016/j.lana.2024.100833. eCollection 2024 Sep.
Ethno-racial inequalities are critical determinants of health outcomes. We quantified ethnic-racial inequalities on adverse birth outcomes and early neonatal mortality in Brazil.
We conducted a cohort study in Brazil using administrative linked data between 2012 and 2019. Estimated the attributable fractions for the entire population (PAF) and specific groups (AF), as the proportion of each adverse outcome that would have been avoided if all women had the same baseline conditions as White women, both unadjusted and adjusted for socioeconomics and maternal risk factors. AF was also calculated by comparing women from each maternal race/skin colour group in different groups of mothers' schooling, with White women with 8 or more years of education as the reference group and by year.
21,261,936 newborns were studied. If all women experienced the same rate as White women, 1.7% of preterm births, 7.2% of low birth weight (LBW), 10.8% of small for gestational age (SGA) and 11.8% of early neonatal deaths would have been prevented. Percentages preventable were higher among Indigenous (22.2% of preterm births, 17.9% of LBW, 20.5% of SGA and 19.6% of early neonatal deaths) and Black women (6% of preterm births, 21.4% of LBW, 22.8% of SGA births and 20.1% of early neonatal deaths). AF was higher in groups with fewer years of education among Indigenous, Black and for all outcomes. AF increased over time, especially among Indigenous populations.
A considerable portion of adverse birth outcomes and neonatal deaths could be avoided if ethnic-racial inequalities were non-existent in Brazil. Acting on the causes of these inequalities must be central in maternal and child health policies.
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Wellcome Trust.
种族不平等是健康结果的关键决定因素。我们对巴西不良出生结局和早期新生儿死亡率方面的种族不平等进行了量化。
我们利用2012年至2019年期间的行政关联数据在巴西开展了一项队列研究。估计了整个人口的归因分数(PAF)和特定群体的归因分数(AF),即如果所有女性都具有与白人女性相同的基线条件,每种不良结局本可避免的比例,包括未调整以及针对社会经济和孕产妇风险因素进行调整后的比例。AF还通过比较不同母亲受教育程度组中每个母亲种族/肤色组的女性来计算,以接受8年及以上教育的白人女性作为参照组,并按年份进行计算。
共研究了21,261,936例新生儿。如果所有女性的发生率与白人女性相同,那么1.7%的早产、7.2%的低出生体重、10.8%的小于胎龄儿以及11.8%的早期新生儿死亡本可预防。可预防的百分比在原住民(22.2%的早产、17.9%的低出生体重、20.5%的小于胎龄儿以及19.6%的早期新生儿死亡)和黑人女性(6%的早产、21.4%的低出生体重、22.8%的小于胎龄儿出生以及20.1%的早期新生儿死亡)中更高。在原住民、黑人和所有结局中,受教育年限较少的群体中AF更高。AF随时间增加,尤其是在原住民群体中。
如果巴西不存在种族不平等,那么相当一部分不良出生结局和新生儿死亡本可避免。针对这些不平等的成因采取行动必须成为母婴健康政策的核心。
比尔及梅琳达·盖茨基金会和惠康信托基金会。