Abstract

Until recently a large body of research conducted in high-income countries had shown that children born after an especially short or especially long birth interval are at an elevated risk of preterm birth, low birth weight, being small for gestational age, as well as other poor perinatal outcomes. However, a handful of recent studies that have adjusted for shared family background more effectively have cast doubt on that conclusion. We use Swedish population data on cohorts born 1981-2010 and sibling fixed effects models to examine whether the length of the birth interval preceding the index person has an impact on the risk of preterm birth, low birth weight, and hospitalization during childhood. We additionally present for the first time for this particular research question analyses stratified by salient social characteristics such as maternal educational level, and maternal country of birth. Overall, we find few effects of birth intervals on our outcomes except for very short birth intervals. Short interpregnancy intervals ( 60 months) increase the probability of low birth weight and preterm birth. We also find that longer intervals (>42 months) decrease the probability of hospitalization during the first year of life, but interpregnancy intervals greater than 30 months increase the probability of hospitalization between ages 1-3. We find few differences in the patterns by maternal educational level, or by maternal country of origin after stratifying by the mother’s highest attained education. The results from this study contribute to the ongoing debate about whether the length of interpregnancy intervals matter for perinatal and child health in high-income countries.

Highlights

  • A large body of work has examined how the length between birth intervals is related to birth outcomes and the health of the child

  • For hospitalizations between ages 1-3, the incidence is highest amongst children born after the shortest Interpregnancy intervals (IPI), but is not elevated for children born after the longest IPIs of longer than 5 years

  • Panel A shows that both the sibling comparison and the OLS model indicate that the IPIs shorter than 7 months are associated with an increase in the probability of low birth weight (LBW)

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Summary

Introduction

A large body of work has examined how the length between birth intervals is related to birth outcomes and the health of the child. This literature has consistently shown that short interpregnancy intervals (e.g. less than 18 months), and long birth intervals (e.g. greater than 60 months) increase the risk of a range of poor outcomes (Conde-Agudelo et al, 2006). Several studies in high-income countries have found that after adopting this approach, the association between short or long birth intervals and poor perinatal outcomes is completely removed (Ball et al, 2014; Class et al, 2017; Hanley et al, 2017). In this study we use Swedish population data to examine whether interpregnancy intervals are associated with preterm birth, low birth weight (LBW), as well as hospitalization at various age windows during childhood. Potential differences across social groups have been ignored in the most recent body of literature that has attempted to control for unobserved shared frailty in the sibling group

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