种族、社会经济地位和年龄:探索未成年母亲早产差异中的交叉因素》(Race, Socioeconomic Status, and Age: Exploring Intersections in Preterm Birth Disparities among Teen Mothers.

Sheryl L Coley, Tracy R Nichols, Kelly L Rulison, Robert E Aronson, Shelly L Brown-Jeffy, Sharon D Morrison
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引用次数: 0

摘要

很少有研究对非裔美国人和白人未成年母亲在不良分娩结果方面的差异进行研究,也很少有研究对造成不良分娩结果的社会经济因素进行具体比较。本研究考察了北卡罗来纳州非裔美国人和白人未成年母亲的邻里社会经济地位(根据人口普查区家庭收入中位数定义)、产妇年龄和早产(PTB)结果的种族差异之间的交叉关系。利用与州出生记录数据和 2010 年美国人口普查的社会经济信息相关联的数据集,通过二元和多层次分析研究了 16,472 名未成年母亲早产结果的差异。非裔美国青少年发生早产的几率明显高于白人青少年(OR = 1.38,95% CI 1.21,1.56)。PTB发生率的种族差异因社区收入不同而有显著差异;收入较高社区的非裔美国青少年的PTB发生率是收入相近社区的白人青少年的2.1倍。17 岁以下的青少年和 17-19 岁的青少年之间的 PTB 差异不大,但非裔美国青少年和白人青少年之间的种族差异较大。这些结果证明有理由利用交叉框架开展进一步调查,以检验种族地位、社区社会经济因素和母亲年龄对少女母亲所生婴儿的出生结果差异的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Race, Socioeconomic Status, and Age: Exploring Intersections in Preterm Birth Disparities among Teen Mothers.

Race, Socioeconomic Status, and Age: Exploring Intersections in Preterm Birth Disparities among Teen Mothers.

Few studies have examined disparities in adverse birth outcomes and compared contributing socioeconomic factors specifically between African-American and White teen mothers. This study examined intersections between neighborhood socioeconomic status (as defined by census-tract median household income), maternal age, and racial disparities in preterm birth (PTB) outcomes between African-American and White teen mothers in North Carolina. Using a linked dataset with state birth record data and socioeconomic information from the 2010 US Census, disparities in preterm birth outcomes for 16,472 teen mothers were examined through bivariate and multilevel analyses. African-American teens had significantly greater odds of PTB outcomes than White teens (OR = 1.38, 95% CI 1.21, 1.56). Racial disparities in PTB rates significantly varied by neighborhood income; PTB rates were 2.1 times higher for African-American teens in higher income neighborhoods compared to White teens in similar neighborhoods. Disparities in PTB did not vary significantly between teens younger than age 17 and teens ages 17-19, although the magnitude of racial disparities was larger between younger African-American and White teens. These results justify further investigations using intersectional frameworks to test the effects of racial status, neighborhood socioeconomic factors, and maternal age on birth outcome disparities among infants born to teen mothers.

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