1. An Unconditional Prenatal Income Supplement Reduces Population Inequities In Birth Outcomes.
- Author
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Brownell, Marni, Nickel, Nathan C., Chartier, Mariette, Enns, Jennifer E., Chateau, Dan, Sarkar, Joykrishna, Burland, Elaine, Jutte, Douglas P., Taylor, Carole, and Katz, Alan
- Subjects
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PRENATAL care , *LOW birth weight , *BREASTFEEDING , *CHILD health services , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *HEALTH status indicators , *INCOME , *PREMATURE infants , *EVALUATION of medical care , *METROPOLITAN areas , *MOTHERS , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *PREGNANCY , *PREGNANCY complications , *PROBABILITY theory , *RESEARCH funding , *RURAL conditions , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *HEALTH equity , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ODDS ratio , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
The Commission on Social Determinants of Health, sponsored by the World Health Organization, has identified measuring health inequities and evaluating interventions to reduce them as important priorities. We examined whether an unconditional prenatal income supplement for low-income women was associated with reduced population-level inequities in birth outcomes. We identified all mother-newborn pairs from the period 2003-10 in Manitoba, Canada, and divided them into the following three groups: low income exposed (received the supplement); low income unexposed (did not receive the supplement); and not low income unexposed (ineligible for the supplement). We measured inequities in low-birthweight births, preterm births, and breast-feeding initiation among these groups. The findings indicated that the socioeconomic gap in birth outcomes between low-income and other women was significantly smaller when the low-income women received the income supplement than when they did not. The prenatal income supplement may be an important driver in attaining population-level equity in birth outcomes; its success could inform strategies seeking to improve maternal and child health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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