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首页> 外文期刊>American journal of public health >Ethnic Density Effects on Birth Outcomes and Maternal Smoking During Pregnancy in the US Linked Birth and Infant Death Data Set
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Ethnic Density Effects on Birth Outcomes and Maternal Smoking During Pregnancy in the US Linked Birth and Infant Death Data Set

机译:美国出生和婴儿死亡数据集对种族密度对妊娠结局和孕妇吸烟的影响

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摘要

Objectives. We investigated whether mothers from ethnic minority groups have better pregnancy outcomes when they live in counties with higher densities of people from the same ethnic group—despite such areas tending to be more socioeconomically deprived. Methods. In a population-based US study, we used multilevel logistic regression analysis to test whether same-ethnic density was associated with maternal smoking in pregnancy, low birthweight, preterm delivery, and infant mortality among 581 151 Black and 763 201 Hispanic mothers and their infants, with adjustment for maternal and area-level characteristics. Results. Higher levels of same-ethnic density were associated with reduced odds of infant mortality among Hispanic mothers, and reduced odds of smoking during pregnancy for US-born Hispanic and Black mothers. For Black mothers, moderate levels of same-ethnic density were associated with increased risk of low birthweight and preterm delivery; high levels of same ethnic density had no additional effect. Conclusions. Our results suggest that for Hispanic mothers, in contrast to Black mothers, the advantages of shared culture, social networks, and social capital protect maternal and infant health. Numerous studies have shown that living in a socioeconomically deprived neighborhood exerts a contextual effect on the health of individual residents beyond their own socioeconomic status. 1 , 2 This is likely to have a differential impact on some ethnic minority groups, such as African Americans and Hispanics. (Throughout this paper we have defined “ethnicity” as a global indicator of a person's heritage including both racial and ethnic origins.) Whereas the majority of poor White people live in nondeprived areas, poor African Americans are concentrated in areas of high poverty. 3 Thus, it might be paradoxical to suggest that members of ethnic minority groups might be healthier when they live in areas with a high concentration of people of the same ethnicity. 4 , 5 However, there is some evidence that living in communities that contain proportionally more people from the same ethnic group is protective for some health outcomes, once material deprivation is accounted for. The evidence for the protective effects of same-ethnic density is strongest for mental health, 4 , 5 with the evidence for maternal and infant health outcomes more mixed. The majority of studies that have investigated the impact of same-ethnic density on maternal and infant health have focused on African Americans or Black families (in this article, we use whichever term was used in the studies we describe). Two older ecological studies 6 , 7 found that increasing levels of same-ethnic density for New York City African Americans were associated with increased fetal and neonatal mortality but not postneonatal mortality. Another study found no association between ethnic density measured in US cities and postneonatal mortality. 8 More recent studies have tended to use multilevel analyses that controlled for individual-level measures of socioeconomic status, and focused on measures of morbidity, such as low birthweight (LBW), with less consistent results. 9 – 14 One study of Chicago neighborhoods found that an increasing proportion of African American residents was associated with a reduced risk of LBW. 13 Two other studies found that an increasing proportion of Black residents was associated with increased risk of LBW. 11 , 14 However, other studies have found no significant associations between same-ethnic density and LBW. 9 , 10 , 12 Five studies have investigated the impact of ethnic density on preterm delivery rates among African Americans. 9 , 10 , 12 , 15 , 16 Studies of neighborhoods in Minnesota 9 and North Carolina 15 found same-ethnic density to be associated with increased risk of preterm delivery after adjustment for individual but not area measures of socioeconomic circumstances. Three other studies found no association between same-ethnic density and preterm delivery in models that included individual-level maternal education and area-level measures of socioeconomic circumstances. 10 , 12 , 16 We are aware of only 1 study that has investigated the impact of same-ethnic density on maternal smoking during pregnancy, which found that it was associated with reduced risk of maternal smoking after adjustment for both individual and area measures of socioeconomic conditions. 17 We found only 2 studies that have investigated the impact of ethnic density on Hispanic maternal and infant health. The first, conducted in the states of Arizona, California, New Mexico, and Texas, found lower rates of infant mortality for US-born Mexican-origin mothers living in counties with high concentrations of mothers of the same ethnicity. 18 However, this effect was not f
机译:目标。我们调查了少数族裔母亲生活在人口密度较高的县城时,尽管这些地区的社会经济状况更加贫困,但这些妇女的妊娠结局是否更好。方法。在一项基于人群的美国研究中,我们使用了多级logistic回归分析来检验581151黑人和763201西班牙裔母亲及其婴儿中,同族密度与孕妇吸烟,低出生体重,早产和婴儿死亡率是否相关,并针对孕产妇和地区一级的特征进行了调整。结果。相同种族密度的升高与西班牙裔母亲婴儿死亡率降低,美国出生的西班牙裔和黑人母亲怀孕期间吸烟率降低有关。对于黑人母亲,中等民族密度的中等水平与低出生体重和早产的风险增加有关。相同种族密度的高水平没有其他影响。结论。我们的研究结果表明,对于西班牙裔母亲而言,与黑人母亲相比,共享文化,社交网络和社会资本的优势可以保护母婴健康。许多研究表明,生活在社会经济匮乏的社区中,对个体居民的健康影响超出其自身的社会经济地位。 1,2 这可能会对某些少数民族产生不同的影响,例如非裔美国人和西班牙裔。 (在本文中,我们将“种族”定义为一个人的遗产的全球指标,包括种族和族裔血统。)尽管大多数贫困白人居住在非贫困地区,但贫困的非洲裔美国人却集中在高贫困地区。 sup> 3 因此,暗示少数族裔成员生活在同一种族人口集中的地区可能会更健康。 4,5 但是,有证据表明,一旦考虑到物质匮乏,居住在比例成比例地来自同一种族的更多人的社区中就可以保护某些健康结果。相同种族密度的保护作用对心理健康的影响最强, 4,5 ,而对母婴健康结局的证据则更为混杂。大多数研究了相同种族密度对孕产妇和婴儿健康影响的研究都集中在非裔美国人或黑人家庭(在本文中,我们使用我们所描述的研究中使用的任何术语)。两项较早的生态研究 6,7 发现,纽约市非裔美国人的同族密度水平升高与胎儿和新生儿死亡率升高相关,而与新生儿后死亡率无关。另一项研究发现,美国城市中的种族密度与新生儿出生后的死亡率之间没有关联。 8 最近的研究倾向于使用多级分析来控制个体水平的社会经济地位,并着重于发病率。 (例如低出生体重(LBW)),结果却不一致。 9-14 一项对芝加哥社区的研究发现,非洲裔美国居民比例的增加与LBW风险降低有关。 13 另外两项研究发现,黑人居民比例的增加与LBW的风险增加有关。 11,14 然而,其他研究也发现,同族密度与LBW之间无显着关联。 9、10、12 五个研究调查了种族密度对非洲裔美国人早产的影响。 9、10、12、15、16 明尼苏达州 9 和北卡罗尔ina 15 发现,同族密度与调整个体(但根据社会经济情况的面积度量)后的早产风险增加相关。其他三项研究发现,在包括个人层面的产妇教育和社会经济状况的地区层面测度的模型中,同种族密度和早产之间没有关联。 10,12,16 我们知道只有1这项研究调查了相同种族密度对怀孕期间孕产妇吸烟的影响,发现调整个体和地区社会经济状况的指标后,这与降低孕产妇吸烟的风险有关。 17 发现只有2项研究调查了种族密度对西班牙裔母婴健康的影响。第一项研究在亚利桑那州,加利福尼亚州,新墨西哥州和得克萨斯州进行,发现生活在美国的墨西哥裔母亲生活在同族裔母亲集中度较高的县,其婴儿死亡率较低。 18 < / sup>但是,此效果不是f

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