Publication | Open Access
Foreign-born and US-born black women: differences in health behaviors and birth outcomes.
160
Citations
6
References
1990
Year
EthnicityFamily MedicineHealth Care DisparityHealth DisparitiesSocial Determinants Of HealthRacial DisparitiesHealth BehaviorsHigh-risk PregnancyRaceSocial HealthAfrican American StudiesBlack WomenHealth InequityPrenatal CarePublic HealthUs-born Black WomenMaternal HealthBoston City HospitalHealth EquityBirth OutcomesPregnancy NutritionPerinatal EpidemiologyHealth BehaviorWomen's HealthPregnancyPediatricsPreterm BirthSocial EpidemiologyDemographyMedicineHealth DisparityImmigrant Health
We studied health behaviors and birth outcome among 201 foreign-born and 616 US-born Black women receiving prenatal care at Boston City Hospital. Foreign-born women had better pre-pregnancy nutritional status and prenatal health behaviors, and their infants had greater intrauterine growth. Black women are not a homogeneous group; culture and ethnicity, in addition to other variables, must be considered in the study of their birth outcomes.
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