Relationships of Sociodemographic Factors With Negative Outcomes of Delivery. Case-Control Study
Date Issued |
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2020-03-03 |
no. 49
Poster presentations
Topics: Maternal, child and family
Abstract type: Research study
Background. Social, economic, demographic, pregnancy and delivery related factors and health care services are important in evaluation of quality of provided obstetric and gynaecologic services. Neverless, impact of sociodemographic factors on delivery outcomes in scientific literature still on discussion and are contraversial. Aim. We aim to evaluate relationships of sociodemographic factors to adverse outcomes of delivery. Methods. Matched case control study design was used. In the study participated 1848 women, 932 cases and 916 controls. In order to evaluate adverse outcomes of delivery and control for confoundings, groups were matched. For statistical analysis was used conditional logistic regresion modelling approach. Univariate and multivariate logistic analyses were performed, odds ratios and its 95% confidence intervals are presented. Ethical and data protection considerations. The study protocol was reviewed and approved by the Biomedical Research Ethics Committee of Kaunas region (No BE-2-33). There was no direct contact with births and neonates during data collection and analysis. No maternal and neonatal personally identifiable information was included in the research data, therefore the Biomedical Research Ethics Committee of Kaunas region exempted the informed consent form usage. Results. Univariate logistic regressions showed independant factor relationships to adverse outcomes of delivery, where mother‘s age (OR=1,071; CI=1,029–1,114), mother‘s weight (OR=0,990; CI=0,984–0,998) and family status/single (OR=0,675; CI=0,487–0,936) were independant and significant risk factors. Multivariate logistic analyses showed that family status/single and number of previous deliveries are important factors only when analysed them together (OR=0,5; CI=0,28–0,89). Other factors as mothers age (OR=1,08; CI=1,03–1,12) and mother‘s weight (OR=0,99; CI=0,98–1,00) remained significant risk factor[...].