Proximity to roadways and pregnancy outcomes

Adverse birth outcomes are associated with exposure to air pollution during pregnancy. Road proximity is a simple, widely available metric for capturing local variation in exposure to traffic-related air pollution. We characterized maternal exposure to traffic-related air pollution during pregnancy...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of exposure science & environmental epidemiology 2013-01, Vol.23 (1), p.32-38
Hauptverfasser: Miranda, Marie Lynn, Edwards, Sharon E, Chang, Howard H, Auten, Richard L
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Adverse birth outcomes are associated with exposure to air pollution during pregnancy. Road proximity is a simple, widely available metric for capturing local variation in exposure to traffic-related air pollution. We characterized maternal exposure to traffic-related air pollution during pregnancy using residential proximity to major roadways among 2004–2008 singleton births in NC. Controlling for maternal race, age, education, nativity, marital status, and tobacco use, and season of birth, parity, infant sex, and Census tract-level urbanization and income, we evaluated the association between road proximity and pregnancy outcomes using generalized linear mixed models with a random intercept for each Census tract. Birth weight, birth weight percentile for gestational age, gestational hypertension, and small-for-gestational age were not associated with road proximity; however, women residing within 250 m of a major roadway were at 3–5% increased odds of low birth weight, preterm birth, and late preterm birth compared with women residing beyond 250 m ( P
ISSN:1559-0631
1559-064X
DOI:10.1038/jes.2012.78