1. Associations Between Rurality, pre-pregnancy Health Status, and Macrosomia in American Indian/Alaska Native Populations
- Author
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Hiratsuka, Vanessa Y, Reid, Margaret, Chang, Jenny, Jiang, Luohua, Brega, Angela G, Fyfe-Johnson, Amber L, Huyser, Kimberly R, Johnson-Jennings, Michelle, Conway, Cheryl, Steiner, John F, Rockell, Jennifer, Dillard, Denise A, Moore, Kelly, Manson, Spero M, and O’Connell, Joan
- Subjects
Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Pediatric ,Diabetes ,American Indian or Alaska Native ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Obesity ,Clinical Research ,Nutrition ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Pregnancy ,Infant ,Female ,Humans ,Adult ,Fetal Macrosomia ,Alaskan Natives ,Overweight ,Weight Gain ,Diabetes ,Gestational ,Birth Weight ,Body Mass Index ,Health Status ,Maternal child health ,Infant weight ,American Indians ,Alaska Natives ,American Indians/Alaska Natives ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Studies in Human Society ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences ,Human society - Abstract
ObjectivesTo examine the relationships between pre-pregnancy diabetes mellitus (DM), gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI) and county-level social determinants of health, with infant macrosomia within a sample of American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) women receiving Indian Health Service (IHS) care.MethodsThe sample included women-infant dyads representing 1,136 singleton births from fiscal year 2011 (10/1/2019-9/30/2011). Data stemmed from the IHS Improving Health Care Delivery Data Project. Multivariate generalized linear mixed models were fitted to assess the association of macrosomia with pre-pregnancy health status and social determinants of health.ResultsNearly half of the women in the sample were under age 25 years (48.6%), and most had Medicaid health insurance coverage (76.7%). Of those with a pre-pregnancy BMI measure, 66.2% were overweight or obese. Although few women had pre-pregnancy DM (4.0%), GDM was present in 12.8% of women. Most women had a normal term delivery (85.4%). Overweight, obesity, pre-pregnancy DM, and county-level rurality were all significantly associated with higher odds of infant macrosomia.
- Published
- 2022