Ann
Epidemiol 1993 Mar;3(2):130-6
Racial and ethnic differences in infant mortality and low birth weight.
A psychosocial critique.
James SA.
Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor 48109.
Recent studies on differences in infant mortality and low birth weight
(LBW) among non-Hispanic whites, African Americans, and Mexican Americans
were reviewed. Despite similar socioeconomic profiles, infant mortality
among Mexican Americans (8/1000 live births) is less than half that of
African Americans (18/1000 live births). In fact, the rate for Mexican
Americans is identical to that of non-Hispanic whites. The data for LBW
follow a similar pattern. What accounts for this unexpectedly low frequency
of poor birth outcomes among Mexican Americans, especially given their
economic disadvantages, reduced access to prenatal care, and exposure
to discrimination based on ethnicity? Does adherence to a traditional
Mexican cultural orientation protect otherwise high-risk Mexican Americans
from poor pregnancy outcomes, as has been suggested? What is the "protective"
social and psychological content of a traditional Mexican cultural orientation?
And what are the implications of this line of reasoning for understanding
the excess risk for poor birth outcomes among African Americans? This
article explores these and related questions and concludes that new conceptual
models are needed to guide research in this area.
Publication Types: Review; Review, Tutorial
PMID: 8269064 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]