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Am J Epidemiol. 1995 Sep
1;142(5):504-14.
Mechanisms for maternal age differences in birth weight.
Strobino DM, Ensminger ME, Kim YJ, Nanda J.
Department of Maternal and Child Health, School of
Hygiene and Public Health, Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
The authors studied three hypothesized explanations for
reduced birth weights of infants born to US adolescent
mothers--social disadvantage, biologic immaturity, and
unhealthy behaviors during pregnancy. A hierarchical
regression analysis was pursued to evaluate these
explanations using data from the National Longitudinal
Study of Youth on 1,754 first births between 1979 and
1983 to women aged 14-25 years at the time of birth. The
birth weights of infants of mothers aged 14-17, 18-19,
and 20-23 years were 133, 54, and 88 g less than for
infants of mothers aged 23-25. The regression results
indicate that the reduced birth weights of infants born
to young mothers, particularly women aged 14-17, were
related to their disadvantaged social environment. When
adjustment was made for poverty and minority status,
there were no maternal age differences in birth weight.
The reduced birth weights were not related to the young
woman's health behaviors during pregnancy or her
biologic characteristics. Ethnicity, poverty status, age
at menarche, maternal height, net maternal weight gain,
and smoking during pregnancy had an independent effect
on birth weight in this sample of young women.
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