Early prenatal care does not close racial gaps in perinatal mortality.Even when they obtain early prenatal care prenatal care, n the health care provided the mother and fetus before childbirth. , women who belong to racial and ethnic minority groups are more likely than white women to experience perinatal mortality--the loss of a fetus or the death of an infant within four weeks after birth. In a large, multicenter study of women who received care during their first trimester Noun 1. first trimester - time period extending from the first day of the last menstrual period through 12 weeks of gestation trimester - a period of three months; especially one of the three three-month periods into which human pregnancy is divided , perinatal mortality Perinatal mortality (PNM), also perinatal death, refers to the death of a fetus or neonate and is the basis to calculate the perinatal mortality rate. Variations in the precise definition of the perinatal mortality exist specifically concerning the issue of inclusion occurred in 10.0 pregnancies per 1,000 among white women, 15.9 per 1,000 among Hispanics and 42.1 per 1,000 among blacks. The racial disparities remained in analyses adjusting for a wide range of variables that may be associated with pregnancy outcomes. (1) Racial disparities in perinatal mortality have been documented for decades. To assess whether they persist when women obtain early prenatal care, analysts examined data from a study of obstetric ob·stet·ric or ob·stet·ri·cal adj. Of or relating to the profession of obstetrics or the care of women during and after pregnancy. obstetrical, obstetric pertaining to or emanating from obstetrics. patients recruited at 10-13 weeks of gestation at 15 sites in nine states in 1999-2002. The database included detailed information about women's demographic and health characteristics, obstetric history and pregnancy complications. Racial differences in women's characteristics and pregnancy complications were assessed through chi-square tests or analyses of variance; odds ratios were calculated to estimate differences in perinatal mortality. A total of 35,529 pregnancies were included in the analyses, of which 5% were among blacks, 22% among Hispanics, 68% among whites and 5% among women of other races or ethnicities. On average, black and Hispanic women were younger and had less education than white women and others, and significantly lower proportions were married. White women had the lowest average body mass index and the lowest levels of use of antihypertensive antihypertensive /an·ti·hy·per·ten·sive/ (-ten´siv) counteracting high blood pressure, or an agent that does this. an·ti·hy·per·ten·sive adj. Reducing high blood pressure. n. medication before pregnancy and of pregestational diabetes. Blacks reported the highest levels of tobacco and illicit drug illicit drug Street drug, see there use during pregnancy; whites, the highest level of alcohol consumption. Both the proportion who had ever had a miscarriage and the proportion who had had a preterm preterm /pre·term/ (-term´) before completion of the full term; said of pregnancy or of an infant. pre·term adj. birth were highest among blacks. The frequency of all i3 pregnancy complications examined differed significantly among racial groups. Notably, the proportions of women experiencing intrauterine growth restriction intrauterine growth restriction n. See intrauterine growth retardation. intrauterine growth retardation Fetal growth restriction Neonatology A generic term for any delay in achieving intrauterine developmental , preterm or very preterm birth (i.e., birth prior to 37 or 32 weeks' gestation) and cesarean cesarean /ce·sar·e·an/ (se-zar´e-an) see under section. ce·sar·e·an or cae·sar·e·an or cae·sar·i·an or ce·sar·i·an adj. Of or relating to a cesarean section. delivery were highest among blacks and lowest among whites. Thirteen pregnancies per 1,000 resulted in fetal losses or neonatal deaths, but the rate differed substantially by mother's race. It was 10.0 per 1,000 for white women, 15.9 per 1,000 for Hispanics, 42.1 per 1,000 for blacks and 16.6 per 1,000 for other women. According to analyses controlling for all of the background characteristics studied, women in any minority group were more likely than whites to experience perinatal mortality (odds ratios, 1.5 for Hispanics, 3.6 for blacks and 1.8 for women of other races). Separate analyses for three components of perinatal mortality yielded similar results: Compared with white women, blacks had sharply higher odds of experiencing fetal loss at fewer than 24 weeks of gestation, fetal loss later in gestation or neonatal death; Hispanic and other women had intermediate risks of these outcomes. As the analysts point out, the data do not present a complete picture of the adequacy of patients' prenatal care; although a visit early in pregnancy was an eligibility requirement for study enrollment, neither the frequency nor the content of visits was documented. Nevertheless, they emphasize that the prospective nature of the data collection from a large, unselected population of pregnant women is a major strength of their data source. The analysts contend that although their findings "implicate im·pli·cate tr.v. im·pli·cat·ed, im·pli·cat·ing, im·pli·cates 1. To involve or connect intimately or incriminatingly: evidence that implicates others in the plot. 2. race as an independent ... factor" in perinatal mortality, research on genetic diversity makes this conclusion "untenable." Rather, they suggest, the racial disparities may stem from "cultural differences [that] often parallel racial and ethnic lines," such as differences in nutritional status nutritional status, n the assessment of the state of nourishment of a patient or subject. and use of health care services. Racial disparities in perinatal mortality, they conclude, must be further explored and addressed, because "prenatal care, although unequivocally helpful and necessary, remains insufficient ... for minority women." REFERENCE (1.) Healy AJ et al., Early access to prenatal care: implications for racial disparity in perinatal mortality, Obstetrics & Gynecology, 2006, 107(3):625-631. |
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