| Literature DB >> 34749749 |
Alesia M Jung1, Sara A Jahnke2, Leslie K Dennis3,4, Melanie L Bell3, Jefferey L Burgess4, Nattinee Jitnarin2, Christopher M Kaipust2, Leslie V Farland3,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Evidence from previous studies suggests that women firefighters have greater risk of some adverse reproductive outcomes. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether women firefighters had greater risk of miscarriage compared to non-firefighters and whether there were occupational factors associated with risk of miscarriage among firefighters.Entities:
Keywords: Epidemiology; Firefighters; Miscarriage; Occupational health; Reproductive health; Spontaneous abortion; Women’s health
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34749749 PMCID: PMC8573857 DOI: 10.1186/s12940-021-00800-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Fig. 1Women from the Health and Wellness of Women Firefighters Study in current analysis of miscarriages
Characteristics of firefighters at 2017 survey with at least one pregnancy, by employment and wildland statusa
| Employment status | Wildland firefighter status | Total | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Volunteer | Career | Structural | Wildland/WUI | ||
| 37 (31–46) | 38 (34–45) | 41 (35–47) | 34 (34–39) | 38 (34–45) | |
| 2 (1–3) | 2 (1–3) | 2 (1–3) | 1 (1–2) | 2 (1–3) | |
| 1 (1–2) | 1 (1–2) | 2 (1–2) | 1 (1–2) | 1 (1–2) | |
| 148 (95) | 845 (93) | 643 (92) | 349 (96) | 993 (93) | |
| < 5 | 51 (6) | 44 (6) | 10 (3) | 55 (5) | |
| ≤ 24.9 kg/m2 | 48 (31) | 479 (52) | 254 (36) | 272 (75) | 527 (49) |
| 25–29.9 kg/m2 | 51 (32) | 295 (32) | 287 (40) | 58 (16) | 346 (32) |
| ≥ 30 kg/m2 | 58 (37) | 143 (16) | 168 (24) | 33 (9) | 201 (19) |
| Some college or less | 102 (65) | 538 (59) | 370 (52) | 269 (74) | 640 (60) |
| College and above | 55 (35) | 379 (41) | 339 (48) | 94 (26) | 434 (40) |
| Married or in partnership | 107 (68) | 721 (79) | 515 (73) | 312 (86) | 828 (77) |
| > $75,000 | 77 (49) | 601 (66) | 570 (81) | 107 (29) | 678 (63) |
| ≤ $75,00 | 79 (51) | 315 (34) | 137 (19) | 256 (71) | 394 (37) |
| Current | 22 (14) | 30 (3) | 41 (6) | 11 (3) | 55 (5) |
| Former | 47 (30) | 155 (17) | 165 (23) | 37 (10) | 202 (19) |
| Never | 88 (56) | 732 (80) | 503 (71) | 319 (87) | 820 (76) |
| 70 (45) | 261 (28) | 279 (39) | 51 (14) | 331 (31) | |
| 135 (15) | 36 (23) | 136 (19) | 34 (9) | 171 (16) | |
| Premenopausal | 103 (71) | 693 (78) | 494 (72) | 302 (86) | 796 (77) |
| Perimenopausal | 17 (12) | 91 (10) | 85 (12) | 22 (6) | 108 (10) |
| Postmenopausal | 25 (17) | 109 (12) | 105 (15) | 28 (8) | 134 (13) |
| 8 (3–14) | 5 (2–12) | 8 (3–14) | 2 (2–8) | 6 (2–13) | |
| Volunteer | – | – | 118 (17) | 39 (11) | 157 (15) |
| Career | – | – | 591 (83) | 324 (89) | 917 (85) |
| No (structural) | 118 (75) | 591 (65) | 709 (100) | – | 709 (66) |
| Yes (wildland only) | < 5 | 22 (2) | – | 26 (7) | 26 (2) |
| Yes (WUI) | 35 (22) | 302 (33) | – | 337 (93) | 337 (31) |
| Firefighter | 75 (48) | 328 (36) | 160 (23) | 242 (67) | 403 (38) |
| Firefighter/paramedic | 30 (19) | 225 (25) | 212 (30) | 43 (12) | 255 (24) |
| Driver operator | 7 (5) | 77 (8) | 66 (9) | 18 (5) | 84 (8) |
| Lieutenant | 10 (6) | 89 (10) | 82 (12) | 16 (4) | 99 (9) |
| Captain | 8 (5) | 95 (10) | 76 (11) | 27 (7) | 103 (10) |
| Chief | 14 (9) | 74 (8) | 77 (11) | 11 (3) | 88 (8) |
| Paramedic | 5 (3) | 5 (1) | 10 (1) | 0 (0) | 10 (1) |
| Other | 8 (5) | 23 (3) | 26 (4) | 5 (1) | 31 (3) |
| 24 h or more on shift | – | 735 (80) | 444 (76) | 290 (90) | 735 (80) |
| Less than 24 h on shift | – | 179 (20) | 144 (24) | 34 (10) | 179 (20) |
| Yes | 57 (36) | 712 (78) | 461 (65) | 306 (84) | 769 (72) |
| No | 72 (46) | 173 (19) | 204 (29) | 41 (11) | 245 (23) |
| Don’t know | 28 (18) | 32 (3) | 44 (6) | 16 (4) | 60 (6) |
IQR interquartile range, BMI Body mass index (kg/m2), WUI wildland urban interface
Responses may not sum to totals due to missing responses not shown here. Percentages may not sum to 100 due to rounding
a All data were collected at time of survey in 2017. Unless otherwise noted, variable is self-reported in 2017
b Includes pregnancies that resulted in either livebirth, miscarriage, stillbirth, or pregnancy termination
Age-at-pregnancy standardized prevalence ratios comparing miscarriage among most recent pregnancy of firefighters to US non-firefighters
| Observed events | Expected events | aSPR (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| All firefighters ( | 138 | 59.2 | 2.33 (1.96–2.75) |
| Employment status | |||
| Career ( | 100 | 51.4 | 1.94 (1.58–2.37) |
| Volunteer ( | 38 | 7.8 | 4.90 (3.47–6.72) |
| Wildland firefighter status | |||
| Structural ( | 115 | 41.6 | 2.76 (2.28–3.32) |
| Wildland/WUI ( | 23 | 17.4 | 1.32 (0.84–1.98) |
| All firefighters ( | 138 | 127.0 | 1.09 (0.91–1.28) |
| Employment status | |||
| Career ( | 100 | 108.8 | 0.92 (0.75–1.12) |
| Volunteer ( | 38 | 18.2 | 2.09 (1.48–2.87) |
| Wildland firefighter status | |||
| Structural ( | 115 | 83.6 | 1.38 (1.14–1.65) |
| Wildland/WUI ( | 23 | 43.2 | 0.53 (0.34–0.80) |
US United States, aSPR age-at-pregnancy-standardized prevalence ratio, CI confidence interval, WUI wildland urban interface
a Lawson et al., 2014 (DOI: 10.1016/j.ajog.2011.12.030). Study included 7482 women from the Nurses’ Health Study II who self-reported details about their most recent pregnancy (resulting in miscarriage or livebirth) while working as a nurse between 1993 and 2000
b Slama et al., 2005 (DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwi097). Study included 5121 pregnancies (resulting miscarriage, stillbirth, or livebirth) belonging to California, US members of the Kaiser Permanente Medical Care Program, with a prenatal appointment between February 1990 and September 1991. Data were abstracted from medical records
Associations between occupational factors and risk of miscarriage among 1074 firefighters and 1864 pregnanciesa,b
| Miscarriages | RR (95% CI) | RR (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Employment, stratified by wildland firefighter status | ||||
| Structural | No | Yes | ||
| Career | 891 (76%) | 281 (24%) | 1.00 (Ref.) | 1.00 (Ref.) |
| Volunteer | 140 (69%) | 64 (31%) | 1.41 (1.11–1.79) | 1.42 (1.11–1.80) |
| Wildland/WUI | No | Yes | ||
| Career | 388 (90%) | 41 (10%) | 1.00 (Ref.) | 1.00 (Ref.) |
| Volunteer | 38 (68%) | 18 (32%) | 3.09 (1.76–5.42) | 2.53 (1.35–4.78) |
| Interaction | < 0.01 | < 0.01 | ||
| Shift schedule of career firefighters, stratified by age at pregnancy | ||||
| < 35 years old | No | Yes | ||
| Less than 24 h on shift | 232 (77%) | 69 (23%) | 1.00 (Ref.) | 1.00 (Ref.) |
| 24 or more hr. on shift | 772 (84%) | 144 (16%) | 0.67 (0.50–0.90) | 0.74 (0.55–0.99) |
| 35+ years old | No | Yes | ||
| Less than 24 h on shift | 64 (78%) | 18 (22%) | 1.00 (Ref.) | 1.00 (Ref.) |
| 24 or more hr. on shift | 211 (70%) | 89 (30%) | 1.29 (0.84–2.00) | 1.28 (0.82–1.99) |
| Interaction | 0.01 | 0.02 | ||
| Worked fire/rescue calls at pregnancy start | No | Yes | ||
| No | 138 (70%) | 58 (30%) | 1.00 (Ref.) | 1.00 (Ref.) |
| Yes | 1250 (79%) | 340 (21%) | 0.81 (0.60–1.09) | 0.82 (0.61–1.11) |
RR Relative risk, CI confidence interval, BMI Body mass index (kg/m2), WUI wildland urban interface
a Generalized estimating equations models with Poisson distribution and sandwich variance estimators were used to estimate risk ratios and 95% CIs
b 86 pregnancies had missing information for wildland status (3), shift schedule (5) and fire/rescue calls (78) and were not included in those models
c Model 1 is adjusted for age at pregnancy, modeled as age at pregnancy and (age at pregnancy)2
d Model 2 is additionally adjusted for highest education completed (some college/at least college degree), gravidity (yes/no), BMI (< 30 kg/m2 / ≥30 kg/m2), and smoking status (current or former/never). Highest education completed, BMI, and smoking status were measured in 2017 at time of survey. Gravidity was assessed for each pregnancy
e p-value for interaction between employment and wildland firefighter status
f p-value for interaction between shift schedule and age at pregnancy, among career firefighters