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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Factors Affecting The Rates Of Childhood Poverty In Tennessee, Aleeya F. Shareef Jan 2022

Factors Affecting The Rates Of Childhood Poverty In Tennessee, Aleeya F. Shareef

Scholarship in Medicine - All Papers

Objective: The goal of this investigation is to analyze data to determine the factors that influence childhood poverty in Tennessee. Specifically, I am examining how child poverty has changed over the past years, as well as determining its associations with residential segregation (Black/white), food insecurity, teen births, low birthweights, child and infant mortalities, drug overdose deaths, access to healthy foods, premature deaths, and uninsured children. Data was used from the County Health Rankings website. Their data has been collected from surveys. Paired t-tests, unpaired t-tests, Pearson correlations, and stepwise linear regressions were performed. Results indicated that Tennessee has had decreased …


Infant Death Rates Between Different Medical Attendants, Zenab Saeed Jan 2020

Infant Death Rates Between Different Medical Attendants, Zenab Saeed

Scholarship in Medicine - All Papers

The function of midwives in the context of maternal health is important, especially when understanding the role of midwives in a global context compared to in the United States. Globally, midwives have served as historically important members in the process of childbirth, but their role has experienced changes in response to increased medicalization over the years, especially in the United States.1 Based of their use and effectiveness in a global context, literature suggests that it may be beneficial for both the healthcare system, mothers, and infants to expand the role of midwives in the United States.2 The purpose of this …


Factors Influencing Infant Death Due To Respiratory Syncytial Virus, Michelle Adamczyk Jan 2020

Factors Influencing Infant Death Due To Respiratory Syncytial Virus, Michelle Adamczyk

Scholarship in Medicine - All Papers

Objective: Determine what factors are associated with increased mortality in infants <1 year old due to respiratory syncytial virus. Methods: Using publicly accessible infant mortality data from CDC Wonder, I used z-scores to compare infant death rates due to RSV between different groups including levels of prematurity, birth weight, and race. Results: When compared by race, mortality rates were highest for infants with mothers who are American Indian or Alaska Natives, followed by infants with Black mothers, and lowest for infants with White or Asian mothers. Infants born with lower weight at birth had higher mortality rates by RSV than infants with higher birth weights. Infants born prematurely, especially at <28 weeks gestation had higher RSV mortality rates. When compared by geographic region, RSV mortality rates were highest in the Southern U.S.. Sorting by mother’s age, infants born to younger mothers, especially mothers <20 years old had higher mortality rates due to RSV. These findings align with previous research focusing on RSV mortality and overall trends in epidemiological factors influencing infant mortality.


The Perspectives Of African American Women: Their Pregnancy Experience And Their Babies’ Birth Outcomes, Kayla M. Hairston Jan 2019

The Perspectives Of African American Women: Their Pregnancy Experience And Their Babies’ Birth Outcomes, Kayla M. Hairston

Master of Public Health Program Student Publications

The health disparity surrounding infant mortality has been a challenge for public health professionals for the past two decades. Today African American babies continue to die at a rate two times higher than the nation’s average rate. The purpose of this study was to explore African American mothers’ perspectives on their pregnancy experience and their babies’ birth outcomes, as a way to provide suggestions for current efforts and interventions being used to lower the rate of infant mortality in the African American population. This study examined fifteen peer reviewed articles that shared the perspectives of African American women who were …


Description Of Race And Preterm Birth In Six Ohio Counties From 2013-2018, Kelly Trabue Jan 2019

Description Of Race And Preterm Birth In Six Ohio Counties From 2013-2018, Kelly Trabue

Master of Public Health Program Student Publications

Objective: The purpose of this research was to describe preterm birth rates, and the risk of preterm birth among maternal race groups in Ohio, Cuyahoga County, Franklin County, Hamilton County, Lucas County, Montgomery County, and Summit County from 2013 to 2018. For the purpose of this study, preterm birth was defined as the live birth of a baby with a period of gestation less than 37 weeks. The maternal race groups were African American, White, and Other.

Methods: A descriptive analysis of retrospective data was conducted on 798,957 live births in Ohio over six years. The data was further divided …


Marijuana Use Among Pregnant Women In A High-Risk Population, Shanice A. Akoto Jan 2018

Marijuana Use Among Pregnant Women In A High-Risk Population, Shanice A. Akoto

Master of Public Health Program Student Publications

Background: Marijuana is the most commonly used illicit substance in pregnancy, often used concurrently with tobacco, increasing the risk for prematurity and low birth weight. Programs such as Healthy Start and CenteringPregnancy® provide resources and prenatal care to women in underserved communities in hopes of improving birth outcomes.

Objective: Evaluate marijuana use in pregnant women living in Montgomery County, Ohio in the highest risk zip codes (45402, 45403, 45405, 45414, 45416, 45417, 45426) and determine if use at delivery is lower in women enrolled in CenteringPregnancy® compared to women who were not. Methods: A secondary analysis of previously collected de-identified …