Racial disparities persist in preterm birth risk
NEW YORK, June 2 (Reuters) Black infants are four times as likely to be born before 28 weeks gestation as white infants, an imbalance that hasn't changed in a decade, a new study shows.
Because such ''extremely pre-term'' babies are at much greater risk of death than infants born later, this disparity is a major factor in the continuing infant mortality gap between blacks and whites in the United States, Dr Ashley H Schempf of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore and colleagues state.
Extremely pre-term infants who do survive are at increased risk of developmental delays and other problems, they point out in the American Journal of Public Health. ''There's not a racial disparity that I'm aware of that's as great and as proximally linked to morbidity and mortality as extreme preterm birth,'' Schempf told Reuters Health.
Disparities in preterm birth, defined as delivery before 37 weeks' gestation, have been reduced in recent years. The researchers sought to determine whether a narrowing of the preterm birth gap between 1990 and 2000 might have resulted in a similar shrinkage of the black-white infant mortality gap.
But during that decade, the researchers found, the racial disparity in infant mortality did not budge. Black babies born in 1990 were 2.3 times more likely to die in infancy than white infants, and black infants born in 2000 were 2.4 times more likely to die before reaching one year of age.
Preterm birth among black infants fell by 10 per cent between 1990 and 2000, but increased among white infants by 16 per cent, the researchers found.
Meanwhile, there was no change in the racial disparity in extreme preterm birth, Schempf and her colleagues found. Given the high rate of death among these infants, the researchers calculate that this disparity accounted for 60 per cent of the overall gap in infant mortality between black and white infants.
Little is known about the causes of preterm birth overall, let alone the reasons for the racial disparities identified by the current study. However, researchers have demonstrated that racial disparities can't be explained by differences in education levels; even among college-educated women, the same if not greater disparities in preterm birth and infant mortality are seen, Schempf said.
''There are likely multiple factors -- social and environmental -- that collide to produce perinatal disparities,'' Schempf said.
''There's
ongoing
research
into
things
like
residential
segregation,
disparities
in
environmental
quality,
and
even
interpersonal
discrimination
and
stress.''
The
findings
underscore
the
importance
of
continuing
such
research
to
identify,
and
address,
the
factors
involved,
she
added.
''Given
the
sheer
magnitude
of
the
disparity
and
its
close
link
to
morbidity
and
mortality,
there
are
few
racial
disparities
that
warrant
greater
research
attention
than
extremely
preterm
birth.''
Reuters
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