LOW BIRTH WEIGHT AND PRENATAL NUTRITION: AN INTERPRETATIVE REVIEW

Author:

Bergner Lawrence1,Susser Mervyn W.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health, City of New York and the Division of Epidemiology, Columbia University School of Public Health and Administrative Medicine, New York, New York

Abstract

Birth weight is considered as a possible crucial intervening variable in a causal sequence that leads from prenatal nutrition to perinatal mortality and retarded child development. Birth weight is shown to have a stronger correlation with perinatal mortality than length of gestation. In New York City, if black infants had the same birth weight distribution as white infants, and the same weight-specific perinatal death rates as they now do, their expected overall perinatal death rate would be the same as for white infants. Three conclusions are germane to the prevention of low birth weight: first, the fetal growth that leads to important variation in birthweight occurs in the last trimester; second, birth weight is influenced by factors in the wider environment as well as in the maternal environment; and third, birth weight is influenced by factors having their origin and effect during gestation. The role of maternal nutrition during gestation is then examined as a factor in birth weight. Observational studies of circumstances of wartime deprivation support a nutritional hypothesis, but observational studies of everyday diets in pregnancy, and quasi-experimental studies that supplement nutrition in pregnancy, have given equivocal results. The hypothesis requires fresh testing. An experimental approach can eliminate or control many extraneous and confounding variables.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Cited by 10 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Born on the wrong side of the tracks: Exploring the causal effects of segregation on infant health;Journal of Health Economics;2024-05

2. Nutrition in Pregnancy;Queenan's Management of High‐Risk Pregnancy;2023-12

3. Maternal Nutrition;Queenan's Management of High-Risk Pregnancy;2012-01-04

4. Impact of the Higgins Nutrition Intervention Program on birth weight: A within-mother analysis;Journal of the American Dietetic Association;1989-08

5. Diabetes in Pregnancy;Advances in Perinatal Medicine;1982

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