J
Natl Med Assoc 1993 Jul;85(7):516-20
Low birthweight in African Americans: does intergenerational well-being
improve outcome?
Foster HW Jr, Thomas DJ, Semenya KA, Thomas J.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Meharry Medical College, Nashville,
Tennessee 37208.
The primary antecedent of infant mortality is low birthweight. Vital
statistics data have shown that women of low socioeconomic status, regardless
of race, are at greater risk for delivering low birthweight infants; however,
prevailing data show that black women of the same socioeconomic status
as white women have a twofold higher risk of giving birth to an infant
weighing < 2500 g and a threefold risk of delivering a very low birthweight
infant weighing < 1500 g. There is also evidence that intergenerational
effects on birth outcome exist. However, virtually all studies of the
effect of socioeconomic status on perinatal outcome have been cross-sectional;
the effect of sustained intergenerational well-being has not been measured.
To address this gap, this study was designed to demonstrate that in an
African-American population with sustained high socioeconomic status and
equal risk factors, the birthweight distribution and other reproductive
outcomes are the same as those for comparable US white populations. Preliminary
findings are reported here.
PMID: 8350372 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]