Child Health Evaluative Sciences, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2024 Nov 6;19(11):e0311895. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0311895. eCollection 2024.
Preterm birth (PTB) affects ~10% of births worldwide; however, most literature focused on short-term clinical outcomes, with much less focus on long-term socioeconomic outcomes after PTB. We examined associations between PTB and individuals' income, employment, and educational outcomes during early adulthood.
We conducted a population-level matched cohort study including all live births in Canada between 1990 and 1996, followed until 2018. Outcomes included Employment income per year in 2018 CAD and employment between ages 18 and 28 years, postsecondary education enrollment (18-22 years), and maximum educational attainment at age 22-27 years. Mean differences and risk ratios (RR) and differences (RD) were estimated using generalized estimating equation regression models for economic outcomes and multinomial logistic regression models for educational outcomes.
Of 2.4 million births, 7% were born preterm (0.3%, 0.6%, 0.8%, and 5.4% born extremely preterm (24-27 weeks), very preterm (28-31 weeks), moderately preterm (32-33 weeks), and late preterm (34-36 weeks) respectively). After matching on baseline characteristics (e.g., sex, province of birth, and parental demographics) and adjusting for age and period effects, preterm-born individuals, on average, had $958 CAD less employment income per year (95% CI: $854-$1062), 6% lower income per year, than term-born individuals, and were 2.13% less likely to be employed (1.98-2.29%). PTB was also negatively associated with university enrollment (RR 0.93 (0.91-0.94) and graduation with a university degree (RR 0.95 (0.94-0.97)). Mean income differences for those born 24-27 weeks were -$5,463 CAD per year (17% lower), and adjusted RR were 0.55 for university enrollment and graduation.
In this population-based study, preterm birth was associated with lower economic and educational achievements at least until the late twenties. The associations were stronger with decreasing GA at birth. Policymakers, clinicians, and parents should be aware that the socioeconomic impact of PTB is not limited to the early neonatal period but extends into adulthood.
早产(PTB)影响全球约 10%的分娩;然而,大多数文献都侧重于短期临床结局,对 PTB 后长期的社会经济结局关注较少。我们研究了 PTB 与个体在成年早期的收入、就业和教育结果之间的关联。
我们进行了一项基于人群的匹配队列研究,纳入了 1990 年至 1996 年期间加拿大所有的活产儿,并随访至 2018 年。结局包括 2018 年加元的年收入和 18-28 岁期间的就业情况、接受高等教育(18-22 岁)和 22-27 岁时的最高教育程度。使用广义估计方程回归模型估计经济结局的均值差异和风险比(RR)和差异(RD),使用多项逻辑回归模型估计教育结局的差异。
在 240 万例分娩中,7%为早产(0.3%、0.6%、0.8%和 5.4%分别为极早早产(24-27 周)、非常早产(28-31 周)、中度早产(32-33 周)和晚期早产(34-36 周))。在匹配基线特征(如性别、出生地和父母人口统计学特征)并调整年龄和时期效应后,与足月出生的个体相比,平均而言,早产出生的个体每年的就业收入少 958 加元(95%CI:854-1062),每年的收入少 6%,就业的可能性低 2.13%(1.98-2.29%)。PTB 还与大学入学率(RR0.93(0.91-0.94))和大学毕业率(RR0.95(0.94-0.97))呈负相关。出生 24-27 周的个体的平均收入差异为每年-5463 加元(低 17%),调整后的 RR 分别为 0.55 用于大学入学和毕业。
在这项基于人群的研究中,早产与至少在 20 多岁时的较低经济和教育成就有关。与出生时的 GA 降低相关的关联更强。政策制定者、临床医生和家长应该意识到,PTB 的社会经济影响不仅限于新生儿早期,而且会持续到成年期。