Ethn
Dis 1992 Summer;2(3):207-21
The weathering hypothesis and the health of African-American women and
infants: evidence and speculations.
Geronimus AT.
Department of Public Health Policy and Administration, University of
Michigan, Ann Arbor 48109-2029.
Observed variation between populations in fertility-timing distributions
has been thought to contribute to infant mortality differentials. This
hypothesis is based, in part, on the belief that the 20s through early
30s constitute "prime" childbearing ages that are low-risk relative
to younger or older ages. However, when stratified by racial identification
over the predominant first child-bearing ages, maternal age patterns of
neonatal mortality vary between groups. Unlike non-Hispanic white infants,
African-American infants with teen mothers experience a survival advantage
relative to infants whose mothers are older. The black-white infant mortality
differential is larger at older maternal ages than at younger ages. While
African Americans and non-Hispanic whites differ on which maternal ages
are associated with the lowest risk of neonatal mortality, within each
population, first births are most frequent at its lowest-risk maternal
ages. As a possible explanation for racial variation in maternal age patterns
of births and birth outcomes, the "weathering hypothesis" is
proposed: namely, that the health of African-American women may begin
to deteriorate in early adulthood as a physical consequence of cumulative
socioeconomic disadvantage.
Publication Types: Review; Review Literature
PMID: 1467758 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]