1. Ethnic disparities in maternal obesity and weight gain during pregnancy. The Generation R Study.
- Author
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Bahadoer, Sunayna, Gaillard, Romy, Felix, Janine F., Raat, Hein, Renders, Carry M., Hofman, Albert, Steegers, Eric A.P., and Jaddoe, Vincent W.V.
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WEIGHT gain in pregnancy , *WEIGHT gain , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *SURINAMESE , *ETHNIC differences , *BODY mass index , *LONGITUDINAL method , *OBESITY , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *LIFESTYLES , *HEALTH equity , *DISEASE prevalence - Abstract
Objective: To examine ethnic disparities in maternal prepregnancy obesity and gestational weight gain, and to examine to which extent these differences can be explained by socio-demographic, lifestyle and pregnancy related characteristics.Methods: In a multi-ethnic population-based prospective cohort study among 6444 pregnant women in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, maternal anthropometrics were repeatedly measured throughout pregnancy. Ethnicity, socio-demographic, lifestyle and pregnancy related characteristics were assessed by physical examinations and questionnaires.Results: The prevalence of prepregnancy overweight and obesity was 23.1% among Dutch-origin women. Statistically higher prevalences were observed among Dutch Antillean-origin (40.8%), Moroccan-origin (49.9%), Surinamese-Creole-origin (38.6%) and Turkish-origin (41.1%) women (all p-values <0.05). Only Dutch Antillean-origin, Moroccan-origin, Surinamese-Creole-origin and Turkish-origin women had higher risks of maternal prepregnancy overweight and obesity as compared to Dutch-origin women (p-values <0.05). Socio-demographic and lifestyle related characteristics explained up to 45% of the ethnic differences in body mass index. Compared to Dutch-origin women, total gestational weight gain was lower in all ethnic minority groups, except for Cape Verdean-origin and Surinamese-Creole-origin women (p-values <0.05). Lifestyle and pregnancy related characteristics explained up to 33% and 40% of these associations, respectively. The largest ethnic differences in gestational weight gain were observed in late pregnancy.Conclusion: We observed moderate ethnic differences in maternal prepregnancy overweight, obesity and gestational weight gain. Socio-demographic, lifestyle and pregnancy related characteristics partly explained these differences. Whether these differences also lead to ethnic differences in maternal and childhood outcomes should be further studied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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