Literature DB >> 30196043

Residential mobility during pregnancy in Urban Gansu, China.

Zhongfeng Tang1, Hanru Zhang1, Haiya Bai1, Ya Chen1, Nan Zhao2, Min Zhou1, Hongmei Cui1, Catherine Lerro2, Xiaojuan Lin1, Ling Lv1, Chong Zhang1, Honghong Zhang1, Ruifeng Xu1, Daling Zhu1, Yun Dang1, Xudong Han1, Xiaoying Xu1, Ru Lin1, Tingting Yao1, Jie Su1, Bin Ma1, Xiaohui Liu1, Yueyuan Wang1, Wendi Wang1, Sufen Liu1, Jiajun Luo2, Huang Huang2, Jiaxin Liang2, Min Jiang3, Weitao Qiu1, Michelle L Bell4, Jie Qiu1, Qing Liu5, Yawei Zhang6.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Studies on environmental exposures during pregnancy commonly use maternal residence at time of delivery, which may result in exposure misclassification and biased estimates of exposure and disease association. Studies on residential mobility during pregnancy are needed in various populations to aid studies of the environmental exposure and birth outcomes. However, there is still a lack of studies investigating residential mobility patterns in Asian populations.
METHODS: We analyzed data from 10,542 pregnant women enrolled in a birth cohort study in Lanzhou, China (2010-2012), a major industrial city. Multivariate logistic regression was used to evaluate residential mobility patterns in relation to maternal complications and birth outcomes.
RESULTS: Of the participants, 546 (5.2%) moved during pregnancy; among those who moved, 40.5%, 34.8%, and 24.7% moved during the first, second, and third trimester, respectively. Most movers (97.3%) moved once with a mean distance of 3.75 km (range: 1-109 km). More than half (66.1%) of the movers moved within 3 km, 13.9% moved 3-10 km, and 20.0% moved > 10 km. Pregnant women who were > 30 years or multiparous, or who had maternal complications were less likely to have moved during pregnancy. In addition, movers were less likely to deliver infants with birth defects, preterm births, and low birth weight.
CONCLUSIONS: Residential mobility was significantly associated with several maternal characteristics and complications during pregnancy. The study also showed a lower likelihood of adverse birth outcomes among movers than non-movers, suggesting that moving might be related to reduce exposure to environmental hazards. These results confirm the hypothesis that residential mobility may be important with respect to exposure misclassification and that this misclassification may vary by subpopulations.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Birth cohort; Birth outcomes; China; Gansu; Residential mobility

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30196043      PMCID: PMC6556377          DOI: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2018.08.021

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Place        ISSN: 1353-8292            Impact factor:   4.078


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