Abstract

Limited data exist related to low birth weight (LBW) incidence and risk factors in Western China. This paper aims to assess LBW and its relationship with antenatal care (ANC) in the poor counties of Western China. A community-based study in rural Western China was conducted in 2011. A kernel distribution was used to estimate the adjusted LBW incidence, and associations between LBW and socio-demographic or maternal factors were examined using multilevel logistic regression. Among 8,964 participants, 65.7% were weighed at birth. Crude LBW incidence was 6.6% and the adjusted rate was 9.3%. The study revealed that risk factors of LBW are being female, raised within a minority group, and with a family income below the national poverty line. For maternal risk factors, LBW was positively associated with not attending at least five or eight ANC visits, not receiving any ANC during the first trimester, and not having access to assess certain ANC content (weight, blood pressure, blood test, urine test, B-scan ultrasound, and folic acid supplement). There is urgent need to promote quality ANC in poor and rural areas of Western China and to prioritize vulnerable women and children who will benefit from quality ANC.

Highlights

  • In both developing and developed countries, low birth weight (LBW) is the leading cause of neonatal death as well as the primary reason for childhood mortality and morbidity [1]

  • Among the 5,891 children who were weighed at their birth, the crude LBW incidence of our sample population was 6.6% (387 cases), and 4.5% children were found to have received a rounded birth weight of exactly 2,500g as measured at their birth

  • Females had a higher risk of LBW than their male counterparts (adjusted odds ratios (OR) (AOR) = 1.45, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.11–1.89) after adjusting for the child’s birth year, ethnicity, number of siblings, delivery place, and family income

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Summary

Introduction

In both developing and developed countries, low birth weight (LBW) (live birth weight

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