Titulo | Unemployment and stillbirth risk among foreign-born and Spanish |
Autoría | Luque-Fernandez MA, Franco M, Gelaye B, Schomaker M, Garitano IG, D'Este C, |
Fuente | Eur J Epidemiol. 2013 Oct 20. [Epub ahead of print] |
Resumen |
We describe stillbirth and unemployment rates by autonomous region in Spain and analyse whether women who gave birth in regions with highunemployment rates were more likely to have a stillborn. We designed a multilevel population-based observational study of births from 2007 to 2010. We defined stillbirth as the outcome, individual maternal socioeconomic and pregnancy-related characteristics as covariates, and maternal autonomous region of residence as the contextual covariate. We used mixed-logistic regression models to account for differences across regions. In total, 1,920,235 singleton births and 5,560 stillbirths were included in the study. Women residing in autonomous regions with the highest rates ofunemployment had a two-times-greater chance of delivering a stillborn (adjusted OR 2.60; 95 % CI 2.08-3.21). The region where women resided explained 14 % of the total individual differences in the risk of delivering a stillborn. The odds of stillbirth were 1.82 (95 % CI 1.62-2.05) times higher for African-born women than for Spanish-born women and 1.90 (95 % CI 1.68-2.15) times higher for women with low educational attainment than forwomen with higher education. In conclusion, regional disparities in stillbirth rates in Spain in the period 2007-2010 were mainly associated with mothers who had low levels of education, were African-born, and lived in regions with higher unemployment. |
URL | www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24142267 |
Tipo de documento | Artículo cientifico |
Impacto en el sistema sanitario | -- |
Impacto en la salud | Salud sexual/reproductiva |