Infant, Premature, Diseases Clinical Trial
Official title:
Study of Hispanic Acculturation Reproduction and the Environment (SHARE)
The most persistent and intractable cause of infant and child mortality and morbidity in the US remains preterm and low birthweight deliveries. Pregnant women in the United States experience the highest incidence of these complications among developed countries. Even more disturbing is the observation that immigrant Hispanic women experience worsening birth outcomes the longer they live here, despite increasing access to prenatal care, improved socio-economic status and better education. The purpose of this study is to identify the potential acculturation-related risk factors for preterm and low birthweight (PTLBW) delivery among Hispanic women of varying lengths of US residency. It is hypothesized that changes in factors associated with acculturation, such as poor nutritional intake, job stress and occupational exposures to pesticides or other hazards, and certain types of genital infections, can best explain the worsening of pregnancy outcomes among Hispanic immigrant women.
The most persistent and intractable cause of infant and child mortality and morbidity in the
US remains preterm and low birthweight deliveries. Pregnant women in the US experience the
highest incidence of these complications among developed countries. Despite many efforts at
increasing prenatal care, rates of preterm delivery have not substantially changed in the
last decade. Even more disturbing is the observation that immigrant Hispanic women
experience worsening birth outcomes the longer they live in the US, despite increasing
access to prenatal care, improved socio-economic status and better education. (Within five
years after moving to the US, the odds ratio for preterm low birth weight delivery increases
by 1.9, from 4% to 7%.)
As migrant women become acculturated to the US, they must be exposed to factors that
adversely affect pregnancy outcomes. But the known risk factors, such as poverty, lack of
education, smoking, substance abuse, inadequate pregnancy weight gain, low pre-pregnancy
weight, high altitude, chronic diseases, primipara, and high parity, explain only a small
percentage of this change in incidence.
The prospective study will enroll a cohort of approximately 1500 pregnant Hispanic women
attending prenatal care services through an OB/GYN group at the San Joaquin General Hospital
in Stockton, CA. The majority of Hispanic women (67%) receiving prenatal care through this
group are Mexican immigrants of varying lengths of US residency, and up to 26% of them are
involved in farm labor and/or other types of manual labor. Eighteen percent are US-born
Mexican women. A study of this unique population of Hispanic women of varying lengths of US
residency, and factors related to occupational risks, acculturation and preterm low birth
weight deliveries, will provide an excellent opportunity to examine the factors of
acculturation-based causes of preterm low birthweight (PTLBW).
The investigators hypothesize that job stress and occupational exposures related to farm
work can best explain the worsening of pregnancy outcomes among Hispanic women. However, in
order to ensure an understanding of the mechanism of this increased rate of preterm low
birthweight within this population, this study will also examine other risk factors that
could possibly be associated with acculturation and preterm low birthweight. Such factors
include changes in nutrition intake, and certain types of genital infections such as
Bacterial Vaginosis, Gonorrhea and Chlamydia.
The knowledge that emerges will have direct application for designing improved programs for
the prevention of preterm low birthweight deliveries among Hispanic women. Just as
important, it will provide insight into the underlying causes of the scandalously high rates
throughout all US populations.
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Observational Model: Defined Population, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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