Impact of rurality on maternal and infant health indicators and outcomes in Maine.

Jul 22, 2015Rural and remote health

How living in rural areas relates to mother and baby health measures and outcomes in Maine

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Abstract

A total of 12,600 mothers responded to the PRAMS questionnaire during the study period.

  • Rural mothers were younger, with 10.5% being teenagers in isolated rural areas compared to 6.2% in urban areas.
  • 39.6% of mothers in isolated rural areas had household incomes ≤US$20,000/year, compared to 28.8% of urban mothers.
  • Rural mothers had higher average pre-pregnancy body mass indexes (26.1 for isolated rural women vs 25.3 for urban women) and were more likely to smoke.
  • Infants born to rural mothers were less likely to be breastfed for ≥8 weeks (52.9% in isolated rural vs 60.9% in urban).
  • There were no differences in Caesarean section rates, rates of premature births, or rates of underweight births among different rurality tiers.

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