Publication | Closed Access
The Washington State Intergenerational Study of Birth Outcomes: methodology and some comparisons of maternal birthweight and infant birthweight and gestation in four ethnic groups
76
Citations
36
References
1999
Year
A statewide database of vital records and hospital discharge summaries of obstetric and neonatal admissions for Washington State in 1987-95 was linked to the birth certificates of mothers born in the state. A total of 46,000 births to mothers of four racial/ethnic groups were studied: Whites, African-Americans, Native Americans and Hispanics. For all four groups inverse associations were found between maternal birthweight and infant low birthweight and preterm birth. The birthweight distribution of African-American mothers was displaced markedly downwards compared with the Whites; this difference in maternal birthweight is offered as a partial explanation of the greater prevalence of suboptimal pregnancy outcomes in the former. In contrast, the maternal birthweight distributions of Whites, Native Americans and Hispanics are similar; differences in pregnancy outcomes are probably more related to maternal preconceptional and postnatal factors in these groups as well as differences in pregnancy-related factors. Mothers' birthweight may have clinical value in identifying high-risk pregnancies.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1