Neonatal abstinence syndrome and other neonatal outcomes for the infants of women experiencing incarceration: A retrospective cohort study

Author:

Bell Megan F.1ORCID,Kelty Erin1ORCID,Segal Leonie2ORCID,Dennison Susan34ORCID,Kinner Stuart A.45678ORCID,Dawe Sharon9ORCID,Spittal Matthew J.5ORCID,Preen David B.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Population & Global Health The University of Western Australia Western Australia Crawley Australia

2. Health Economics and Social Policy University of South Australia South Australia Adelaide Australia

3. School of Criminology and Criminal Justice Griffith University Queensland Mt Gravatt Australia

4. Griffith Criminology Institute Griffith University Queensland Mt Gravatt Australia

5. Melbourne School of Population and Global Health University of Melbourne Victoria Parkville Australia

6. Justice Health Group Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Royal Children's Hospital New South Wales Parkville Australia

7. School of Population Health Curtin University Western Australia Perth Australia

8. Justice Health Group, enAble Institute Curtin University Bentley Western Australia Australia

9. School of Applied Psychology Griffith University Queensland Mt Gravatt Australia

Abstract

AbstractSubstance use during pregnancy is associated with poor neonatal outcomes. Women incarcerated during pregnancy may have a history of substance use, and their babies may be at risk of neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS). This study examines the incidence of NAS and other outcomes in infants born to currently or formerly incarcerated women. Infants born between 1985 and 2011 in Western Australia were divided into three mutually exclusive groups: born to women incarcerated during pregnancy (n = 708); born within 9–24 months of the mother's release from prison (n = 651); and born to women who were never incarcerated (n = 17,712). The impact of the timing of incarceration during pregnancy was also examined. Neonatal outcomes (NAS, preterm birth, low birthweight, infant mortality and admission to special care nursery) were compared using logistic regression. Infants born to currently or recently incarcerated women had higher odds of all adverse outcomes than infants in the nonexposed group. Infants born to women incarcerated during the second or third trimester (but not the month of birth) had poorer outcomes than infants born to women incarcerated during the month of birth. The findings show that babies born to currently or formerly incarcerated women are equally likely to experience adverse neonatal outcomes. Enhanced maternal healthcare must be provided during incarceration and after release.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

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