An epidemiologic study of preterm delivery

American journal of epidemiology, 113(1), 81-92

DOI 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a113068 PMID 7457481 Source

Abstract

A case-control study of the epidemiology of preterm delivery was undertaken at Yale-New Haven Hospital in Connecticut during 1977. The study population consisted of 175 mothers of singleton preterm infants and 313 mothers of singleton term infants. Significant risk factors of a preterm delivery included low socioeconomic status; low pregravid weight; inadequate weight gain during the pregnancy; a previous preterm delivery; a history of infertility problems; an induced abortion terminating the previous pregnancy; vaginal spotting or light bleeding during the pregnancy; antepartum hemorrhage and abnormal placental implantation; lack of leisure-time physical activities during the pregnancy; alcohol consumption prior to the third trimester of pregnancy; and negative attitudinal expression toward the pregnancy.

Topics

preterm delivery risk factors, preterm birth epidemiology, prematurity and previous abortion, preterm birth infertility history, socioeconomic status preterm delivery, alcohol and preterm birth, pregnancy weight gain preterm risk, case-control study preterm labor, recurrent preterm delivery, bleeding during pregnancy preterm risk

Cite this article

Berkowitz, G. S. (1981). An epidemiologic study of preterm delivery. *American journal of epidemiology*, *113*(1), 81-92. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a113068

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