Ryan Franco on Unsplash
Ryan Franco on Unsplash

Trump's election win may have caused early labour in Latina women

Embargoed until: Publicly released:
The 2016 US presidential election, complete with Trump's staunch anti-immigration rhetoric, may have been so stressful for pregnant Latina women that they went into early labour, according to a US study. Researchers found the number of preterm births in the nine months after November 2016 was up to 3.6 per cent higher than the number of expected preterm births that would have occurred in the absence of an election. The enforcement of Trump's anti-immigration policies prompts the need for further research into how they impact health, the authors say.

Journal/conference: JAMA Network Open

Link to research (DOI): 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.7063

Organisation/s: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA

Funder: The University of California, San Francisco. One of the authors received grants from the Peter G. Peterson Foundation during the conduct of the study. Other authors reported grants from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and the National Institutes of Health.

Media Release

From: JAMA

A national population-based study suggests the 2016 U.S. presidential election may have been associated with an increase in preterm births among Latina women in the United States. The design of the study is used to evaluate whether policies or other population-level changes interrupt a trend in an outcome. Using data on birth counts from 2009 through July 2017 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, researchers compared preterm births (less than 37 weeks) to Latina women after the 2016 presidential election with the number expected had the election not taken place. Among nearly 32.9 million live births recorded during the study period, 11% of males and 9.6% of female births to Latina women were preterm compared with 10.2% and 9.3%, respectively, to other women. In the nine-month period beginning in November 2016, an additional 1,342 male and 995 female preterm births to Latina women were found above the expected number of preterm births, which is about 3.2% to 3.6% more. This study cannot identify the reasons behind the findings and other limitations of the study include aninability to differentiate between native and nonnative Latina women in the U.S. The authorssuggest future research look at the association of anti-immigration policies with populationhealth.

Attachments:

Note: Not all attachments are visible to the general public

  • JAMA
    Web page
    The URL will go live once the embargo ends.

News for:

International

Media contact details for this story are only visible to registered journalists.