Neighborhood mobility and racial disparities in preterm birth: A sibling study in California

IF 3.8 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Samantha Gailey , Collette N. Ncube , Richard C. Sadler , Tim A. Bruckner
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Abstract

Recent work finds that upward neighborhood mobility—defined as reductions in neighborhood socioeconomic disadvantage due to moving—may improve birth outcomes. Less work, however, explores whether changes in socioeconomic context differentially impact birth outcomes by maternal race and ethnicity. In the US, mothers of minoritized racial and ethnic identity often experience worse neighborhood conditions and pregnancy outcomes than White mothers. Using a sibling-linked dataset, we examined whether neighborhood mobility corresponds with changes in preterm birth risk among Asian (N = 130,079), Black (N = 50,149), Hispanic (N = 429,938), and White (N = 233,428) mothers who delivered multiple live births in California between 2005 and 2015. We linked residential addresses at each birth to census-derived indices of neighborhood disadvantage and defined levels of neighborhood mobility as moving-induced changes in disadvantage between pregnancies. We mapped neighborhood mobility patterns and fit conditional logistic regression models estimating the odds of preterm birth in the sibling delivered after moving, controlling for the risk of preterm birth in the sibling delivered before moving, by maternal race and ethnicity. Dot density maps highlight racialized patterns of neighborhood mobility and segregation between Black and White mothers. Regression results show that Black and, in some cases, Asian and Hispanic mothers who experienced upward mobility (moves away from neighborhood disadvantage) exhibited reduced odds of preterm birth in the second delivery. Upward mobility did not reduce the odds of preterm birth among White mothers. Findings suggest that policies and programs that enable opportunities for neighborhood mobility may reduce persistent racial and ethnic disparities in adverse birth outcomes.

邻里流动与早产的种族差异:加州同胞研究
最近的研究发现,邻里间的向上流动--即邻里间因搬迁而减少的社会经济劣势--可能会改善出生结果。然而,探讨社会经济环境的变化是否会对不同种族和族裔母亲的生育结果产生不同影响的研究较少。在美国,少数种族和民族身份的母亲往往比白人母亲经历更差的社区条件和妊娠结局。我们使用同胞链接数据集,研究了 2005 年至 2015 年间在加利福尼亚州分娩多胎活产的亚裔(N = 130,079 人)、黑人(N = 50,149 人)、西班牙裔(N = 429,938 人)和白人(N = 233,428 人)母亲中,邻里流动性是否与早产风险的变化相对应。我们将每次分娩时的居住地址与人口普查得出的邻里不利条件指数联系起来,并将邻里流动性水平定义为两次怀孕之间由搬迁引起的不利条件变化。我们绘制了邻里流动模式图,并拟合了条件逻辑回归模型,按母亲的种族和族裔估算了搬迁后分娩的兄弟姐妹早产的几率,同时控制了搬迁前分娩的兄弟姐妹早产的风险。点密度图突出显示了黑人和白人母亲之间邻里流动和隔离的种族模式。回归结果显示,经历过向上流动(远离不利社区)的黑人母亲,以及在某些情况下经历过亚裔和西班牙裔母亲,在第二次分娩时出现早产的几率会降低。向上流动并没有降低白人母亲早产的几率。研究结果表明,能够为邻里流动提供机会的政策和计划可能会减少不良分娩结果中持续存在的种族和民族差异。
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来源期刊
Health & Place
Health & Place PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
6.20%
发文量
176
审稿时长
29 days
期刊介绍: he journal is an interdisciplinary journal dedicated to the study of all aspects of health and health care in which place or location matters.
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