Suppr超能文献

加拿大黑人社区的孕产妇和新生儿健康:流行病学研究的范围综述

Maternal and neonatal health in Canada's Black communities: A scoping review of epidemiologic studies.

作者信息

Lennord Ebonee, Amoako Elsie, Rajasingham Maya, Kirubarajan Abirami, D'Souza Rohan, Malhamé Isabelle, Dzakpasu Susie, Tunde-Byass Modupe, Maxwell Cynthia, Muraca Giulia M

机构信息

Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada.

Mino Care, Toronto, ON, Canada.

出版信息

Can J Public Health. 2025 Sep 4. doi: 10.17269/s41997-025-01102-9.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

Black-White disparities in maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality highlight health inequities in several settings, yet such racial disparities in Canada are not well defined. Our objective was to conduct a scoping review to identify the extent of epidemiologic evidence assessing Black-White disparities in maternal and neonatal health in Canada.

METHODS

We included peer-reviewed epidemiologic studies which measured maternal or neonatal outcomes in Black versus White individuals in Canada. We searched OVID platforms (MEDLINE, Embase, Emcare) from inception to May 9, 2024, using keywords and controlled vocabulary terms related to race and maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality. Results synthesis was carried out using descriptive analysis.

SYNTHESIS

After exclusions, six retrospective cohort studies were included in the scoping review. The majority of the included studies used data obtained from provincial datasets (n = 5), defined maternal race using self-reported race (n = 5), and were set in Ontario (n = 4). All studies reported one or more significant associations between race and adverse maternal or neonatal outcomes, with Black individuals experiencing higher rates of spontaneous fetal loss (n = 1), perinatal mortality (n = 1), preterm birth (n = 3), small for gestational age infants (n = 1), low Apgar scores (n = 2), congenital heart disease (n = 1), neonatal intensive care unit admission (n = 1), preeclampsia (n = 2), gestational diabetes (n = 1), and inadequate gestational weight gain (n = 1).

CONCLUSION

Although literature on the topic is sparse, Black-White disparities in maternal and neonatal health in Canada are apparent. National, population-based data are needed to provide a comprehensive understanding of racial disparities in maternal and neonatal health and the factors driving these differences.

摘要

目的

孕产妇和新生儿发病率及死亡率方面的黑白差异凸显了多种环境下的健康不平等现象,但加拿大的此类种族差异尚无明确定义。我们的目的是进行一项范围综述,以确定评估加拿大孕产妇和新生儿健康方面黑白差异的流行病学证据的程度。

方法

我们纳入了经同行评审的流行病学研究,这些研究测量了加拿大黑人和白人个体的孕产妇或新生儿结局。我们使用与种族以及孕产妇和新生儿发病率及死亡率相关的关键词和控制词汇,在OVID平台(MEDLINE、Embase、Emcare)上从起始日期至2024年5月9日进行了检索。结果综合采用描述性分析。

综合

排除相关研究后,六项回顾性队列研究被纳入范围综述。纳入的大多数研究使用了从省级数据集获得的数据(n = 5),使用自我报告的种族定义孕产妇种族(n = 5),且研究地点在安大略省(n = 4)。所有研究均报告了种族与不良孕产妇或新生儿结局之间存在一种或多种显著关联,黑人个体出现自然流产率较高(n = 1)、围产期死亡率较高(n = 1)、早产率较高(n = 3)、小于胎龄儿发生率较高(n = 1)、阿氏评分较低(n = 2)、先天性心脏病发生率较高(n = 1)、新生儿重症监护病房入院率较高(n = 1)、先兆子痫发生率较高(n = 2)、妊娠期糖尿病发生率较高(n = 1)以及孕期体重增加不足发生率较高(n = 1)。

结论

尽管关于该主题的文献稀少,但加拿大孕产妇和新生儿健康方面的黑白差异明显。需要基于全国人口的数据来全面了解孕产妇和新生儿健康方面的种族差异以及导致这些差异的因素。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验