BMC Public Health (Jun 2002)

Preconceptional factors associated with very low birthweight delivery in East and West Berlin: a case control study

  • Reiher Horst,
  • Stroux Andrea,
  • Dudenhausen Joachim W,
  • Bührer Christoph,
  • Grimmer Ingrid,
  • Halle Horst,
  • Obladen Michael

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-2-10
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
p. 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background Very low birthweight, i.e. a birthweight Methods In 1992, two years after the German unification, we started to recruit two cohorts of very low birthweight infants and controls in East and West Berlin for a long-term neurodevelopmental study. The present analysis was undertaken to compare potential preconceptional risk factors for very low birthweight delivery in a case-control design including 166 mothers (82 East vs. 84 West Berlin) with very low birthweight delivery and 341 control mothers (166 East vs. 175 West). Results Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to assess the effects of various dichotomous parental covariates and their interaction with living in East or West Berlin. After backward variable selection, short maternal school education, maternal unemployment, single-room apartment, smoking, previous preterm delivery, and fetal loss emerged as significant main effect variables, together with living in West Berlin as positive effect modificator for single-mother status. Conclusion Very low birthweight has been differentially associated with obstetrical history and indicators of maternal socioeconomic status in East and West Berlin. The ranking of these risk factors is under the influence of the political framework.