Literature DB >> 11237114

Risk factors for pre-eclampsia/eclampsia among working women in Mexico City.

P Cerón-Mireles1, S D Harlow, C I Sánchez-Carrillo, R M Núñez.   

Abstract

This study examined risk factors for pre-eclampsia/eclampsia in a population-based sample of pregnant working women in Mexico City. Over a 3-month period, all women who gave birth at three major hospitals and who had worked for at least 3 months during pregnancy were interviewed. After excluding mothers with multiple gestations or infants with birth defects, and previous diagnoses of hypertension, chronic renal disease or diabetes, 131 of 2,436 women (5.4%) had been diagnosed with pre-eclampsia and/or eclampsia. The frequency was much higher among women of low socio-economic status: 12% of uninsured women (SSA) compared with 4.2% of private sector employees (IMSS) and 1.3% of public sector employees (ISSSTE). After adjusting for education, women working in services (OR = 1.68, 95% CI = 1.01, 2.81) and in retail (OR = 1.99, 95% CI = 1.18, 3.37), primiparae (OR = 2.64, 95% CI = 1.65, 4.21) and women whose pregestational weight was > or = 55 kg (OR = 2.02, 95% CI = 1.34, 3.04) were at increased risk. Efforts to develop and evaluate intervention programmes should target hospitals serving the uninsured (SSA) if reduction in the number of preventable maternal deaths in Mexico is to be achieved. Such programmes should also target service and retail workers and identify women with poor glycaemic control early in pregnancy.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11237114

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Paediatr Perinat Epidemiol        ISSN: 0269-5022            Impact factor:   3.980


  3 in total

1.  Socio-demographic and other risk factors of pre eclampsia at a tertiary care hospital, karnataka: case control study.

Authors:  Ramesh K; Sangeetha Gandhi; Vishwas Rao
Journal:  J Clin Diagn Res       Date:  2014-09-20

2.  Association between childhood and adulthood socioeconomic position and pregnancy induced hypertension: results from the Aberdeen children of the 1950s cohort study.

Authors:  Debbie A Lawlor; Susan M B Morton; Dorothea Nitsch; David A Leon
Journal:  J Epidemiol Community Health       Date:  2005-01       Impact factor: 3.710

3.  Genesis of preeclampsia: an epidemiological approach.

Authors:  Jaime Salvador-Moysén; Yolanda Martínez-López; José M Ramírez-Aranda; Marisela Aguilar-Durán; Alberto Terrones-González
Journal:  ISRN Obstet Gynecol       Date:  2012-02-08
  3 in total

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