195 Race-related stress is associated with low weight and gestational age at birth in a prospective cohort study of pregnant Black persons

Sydni Williams, Meghna Ravi, Kait Stanhope, Mariana Rocha, Abby Britt, Suchitra Chandrasekaran, Alicia K Smith, Sierra Carter, V. Michopoulos
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Abstract

OBJECTIVES/GOALS: Low birth weight and preterm birth are significant contributors to infant mortality in the United States that disproportionally impact Black pregnant persons and their offspring. Although these outcomes are linked to chronic stress, the contribution of race-related stress remains largely understudied. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: We investigated the effect of race-related stress on weight and gestational age at birth in a prospective cohort of 115 pregnant Black persons recruited at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta, Georgia. The Index of Race-Related Stress Brief (IRRS-Brief), Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), and Stressful Events Questionnaire (SEQ) were collected at study enrollment during pregnancy. Neonatal birth weights and gestational age were collected via standardized medical record abstraction. We conducted linear regressions to determine whether greater race-related stress was associated with lower weight and gestational age at birth, while controlling for sources of prenatal stress. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Global racism (total IRRS score) was significantly associated with birth weight when controlling for prenatal perceived stress and stressful life events within the last six months since study enrollment (beta=−16.7, p=.035). Neonatal gestational age was associated with both global racism (beta=-0.03, p=.028) and individual racism (IRRS’Individual’ subscale score) (beta=-0.09, p=.032) when controlling for prenatal perceived stress and stressful life events within the last six months since study enrollment. These results suggest that greater race-related stress contributes to lower weight and gestational age at birth in pregnant Black persons. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE: Future studies are necessary to determine the mechanisms by which race-related stress contributes to these adverse birth outcomes and to inform the development risk-assessment tools and interventions to mitigate the threat of race-related stress on adverse birth outcomes in high-risk populations.
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195 在一项针对黑人孕妇的前瞻性队列研究中,与种族有关的压力与低体重和胎龄有关
目的/目标:出生体重不足和早产是造成美国婴儿死亡的重要原因,对黑人孕妇及其后代的影响尤为严重。虽然这些结果与慢性压力有关,但与种族有关的压力在很大程度上仍未得到充分研究。方法/研究对象:我们在佐治亚州亚特兰大市格雷迪纪念医院招募了 115 名黑人孕妇,对种族相关压力对体重和出生胎龄的影响进行了前瞻性队列研究。在怀孕期间,研究人员在注册时收集了种族相关压力指数简表(IRRS-Brief)、感知压力量表(PSS)和压力事件问卷(SEQ)。新生儿出生体重和胎龄通过标准化病历摘要收集。我们进行了线性回归,以确定在控制产前压力来源的情况下,与种族相关的更大压力是否与较低的出生体重和胎龄有关。结果/预期结果:在控制产前感知到的压力和研究注册后最近六个月内的生活压力事件的情况下,总体种族主义(IRRS 总分)与出生体重有显著相关性(β=-16.7,p=.035)。新生儿胎龄与整体种族主义(beta=-0.03,p=.028)和个体种族主义(IRRS'Individual'分量表得分)(beta=-0.09,p=.032)相关,前提是控制了产前感知压力和入组以来最近六个月内的生活压力事件。这些结果表明,与种族相关的压力越大,黑人孕妇的体重和胎龄越低。讨论/意义:今后有必要进行研究,以确定种族相关压力导致这些不良出生结果的机制,并为开发风险评估工具和干预措施提供信息,以减轻种族相关压力对高危人群不良出生结果的威胁。
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