To identify and quantify risk factors for preterm and term low birthweight (LBW) we conducted a hospital-based case-control study, linked with a population survey in Ahmedabad, India. The case-control study of 673 term LBW, 644 preterm LBW cases and 1465 controls showed that low maternal weight, poor obstetric history, lack of antenatal care, clinical anaemia and hypertension were significant independent risk factors for both term and preterm LBW. Short interpregnancy interval was associated with an increased risk of preterm LBW birth while primiparous women had increased risk of term LBW. Muslim women were at a reduced risk of term LBW, but other socioeconomic factors did not remain significant after adjusting for these more proximate factors. Estimates of the prevalence of risk factors from the population survey was used to calculate attributable risk. This analysis suggested that a substantial proportion of term and preterm LBW births may be averted by improving maternal nutritional status, anaemia and antenatal care.
Intra-uterine growth retardation is an important public health problem in many developing countries. The authors conducted a case-control study of low birth weight (LBW) in three teaching hospitals and a population survey in Ahmedabad city, India during 1987-1988. To identify and quantify risk factors for small for gestational age births, we divided the low birth weight and control infants into small for gestational age (SGA, n = 617) and appropriate for gestational age (AGA, n = 1851) using an Indian birth weight by gestational age standard. Logistic regression was used to estimate adjusted odds ratios for important risk factors. Prevalence of risk factors was estimated from a community sample survey of mothers (n = 1102) who had delivered in the past year. Attributable risks were calculated from odds ratios and prevalence data. The most important risk factors for SGA was poor maternal nutritional status (weight < 51 kg) with an attributable risk of 42 per cent. Other significant risk factors were anaemia, primiparity, poor obstetric history, lack of antenatal care and hypertension during pregnancy, and birth defects, each of which contributed only moderately to the attributable risk. The analysis indicates that improvement of maternal nutrition and antenatal care might prevent a substantial portion of SGA births in this and similar populations.
To estimate levels and determinants of perinatal mortality, we conducted a hospital-based surveillance and case-control study, linked with a population survey, in Ahmedabad, India. The perinatal mortality rate was 79.0 per 1000, and was highest for preterm low-birth-weight babies. The case-control study of 451 stillbirths, 160 early neonatal deaths and 1465 controls showed that poor maternal nutritional status, absence of antenatal care, and complications during labour were independently associated with substantially increased risks of perinatal death. Multivariate analyses indicate that socioeconomic factors largely operate through these proximate factors and do not have an independent effect. Estimates of attributable risk derived from the prevalence of exposures in the population survey suggest that improvements in matemal nutrition and antenatal and intrapartum care could result in marked reductions of perinatal mortality.
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