Abstract

BackgroundInterpersonal discrimination experience has been associated with adverse birth outcomes. Limited research has evaluated this relationship within multicultural contexts outside the United States where the nature and salience of discrimination experiences may differ. Such research is important in order to help identify protective and risk factors that may mediate the relationship between discrimination experience and adverse birth outcomes.MethodsEvaluated the relationship between perceived discrimination, as measured in pregnancy, with birth weight and gestation length among Māori, Pacific, and Asian women from Aotearoa New Zealand (N = 1653).ResultsThirty percent of the sample reported some type of unfair treatment that they attributed to their ethnicity. For Māori women specifically, unfair treatment at work (β = − 243 g) and in acquiring housing (β = − 146 g) were associated with lower birth weight when compared to Māori women not experiencing these types of discrimination, while an ethnically motivated physical attack (β = − 1.06 week), and unfair treatment in the workplace (β = − 0.95 week), in the criminal justice system (β = − 0.55 week), or in banking (β = − 0.73 week) were associated with significantly shorter gestation.ConclusionsDespite a high prevalence of discrimination experience among women from all ethnic groups, discrimination experience was a strong predictor of lower birth weight and shorter gestation length among indigenous Māori women only. Additional research is needed to better understand the risk and protective factors that may moderate the relationship between discrimination experience and adverse birth outcomes among women from different ethnic groups.

Highlights

  • Interpersonal discrimination experience has been associated with adverse birth outcomes

  • Maternal experiences of ethnic discrimination have been associated with the development of adverse birth outcomes, including low birth weight and preterm birth, in studies from the United States [13,14,15, 21]

  • Our analyses examined the association between experiences of ethnic discrimination and birth outcomes, while adjusting for several covariates

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Interpersonal discrimination experience has been associated with adverse birth outcomes. Such research is important in order to help identify protective and risk factors that may mediate the relationship between discrimination experience and adverse birth outcomes. One of the pathways through which health inequities can emerge is through differential exposure to psychosocial stressors, such as discrimination [3]. Discrimination can be both interpersonal and institutional [4]. Maternal experiences of ethnic discrimination have been associated with the development of adverse birth outcomes, including low birth weight and preterm birth, in studies from the United States [13,14,15, 21]. It is possible that well documented inequities in chronic disease documented among ethnic minorities in adulthood may trace back, in part, to maternal experience of prenatal stress, including experiences of ethnic discrimination [28]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call