Am
J Prev Med 1987 Sep-Oct;3(5):254-61.
Racial disparities in pregnancy outcomes: the role of prenatal care
utilization and maternal risk status.
Alexander GR, Cornely DA.
Department of Maternal and Child Health, School of Hygiene and Public
Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21205.
Distinct black-white differences in pregnancy outcome and prenatal care
utilization have been a persistent feature of U.S. natality-related statistics.
Using South Carolina and North Carolina live birth-infant death cohort
files for 1978-1982, this study examines the extent to which variations
in prenatal care utilization may be associated with racial disparities
in pregnancy outcome within maternal sociomedical risk groups. After taking
indicators of maternal risk into account (age-parity, education, marital
status, complications of pregnancy and previous pregnancy terminations),
birth weight and gestational age distributions and birth weight- and gestational
age-specific neonatal mortality rates of blacks and whites were compared
by level of prenatal care utilization. Distinct racial differences in
birth weight and gestational age distributions were observed within equivalent
maternal risk and prenatal care categories, with whites having an approximately
200-gram mean birth weight and five-day mean gestational age advantage
compared to blacks. In this analysis of more than 650,000 cases, low-risk
blacks adequately utilizing prenatal care had a lower mean birth weight
(3,266 grams) and a higher neonatal mortality rate (6.6) than low-risk,
inadequate-care whites (3,302 grams; 6.1).
PMID: 3452363 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]