Ethn
Dis 1992 Winter;2(1):18-26.
Differences in neonatal mortality by race, income, and prenatal care.
Collins JW Jr, David RJ.
Division of Neonatology, Children's Memorial Hospital, Chicago, Illinois
60614.
To determine the extent to which the social and physical environment
affects the association between prenatal care and black pregnancy outcome
in Chicago, we performed a stratified analysis of 1982-1983 Illinois vital
records and 1980 United States census income data. Median family income
of the mother's census tract was used as the ecologic variable. In very-low-income
census tracts (less than $10,000 per year), 40% of blacks and 47% of whites
received adequate prenatal care. There was no racial disparity in the
percentage of low-birth-weight infants attributed to inadequate prenatal
care among poor mothers. For mothers who resided in moderate-income areas
($20,001 to $30,000 per year), 50% of blacks and 67% of whites received
adequate prenatal care. Although adequate (compared to inadequate) prenatal
care was associated with improved birthweight distribution independent
of community income, only in moderate-income areas was it related to black
neonatal survival. For term black infants who received adequate prenatal
care, residence in impoverished areas was associated with a nearly fourfold
greater neonatal mortality rate (deaths per 1000 live births): 5/1000
vs 1/1000; RR = 3.8 (1.3-11.0). We conclude that place of residence is
an important risk factor for black neonatal mortality.
PMID: 1458212 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]