The effect on birth weight of employment during pregnancy
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Published:1979-07
Issue:3
Volume:11
Page:259-267
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ISSN:0021-9320
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Container-title:Journal of Biosocial Science
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language:en
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Short-container-title:J. Biosoc. Sci.
Abstract
SummaryA study of employment during pregnancy and its effects was carried out among pregnant women who were under the care of the Community Health Center, Hadassah Medical School, in a neighbourhood of West Jerusalem. Of the women, 46−2% worked during pregnancy, and 78−6% of them were in occupations which demanded light physical activity. Most of the women worked throughout the whole pregnancy. Educational level as well as parity emerged as the main factors in determining whether a pregnant woman worked or not. No significant effects of employment were found in pregnancy complications or length of gestation, but significant differences did emerge in the number of delivery abnormalities. This finding is interpreted as the result of the interaction of several social conditions rather than of work itself. The findings support the hypothesis that work by itself does not affect either pregnancy or its outcome (as measured by birth weight).
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Social Sciences
Reference17 articles.
1. A note on the obstetric effects of work during pregnancy;Stewart;Br.J.prev.soc.Med.,1955
2. Are Israeli women really equal? Trends and patterns of Israeli women' labor force participation: a comparative analysis;Padan-Einsenstark;J.Marr. and Fam.,1973
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