Birthweight
BIRTHWEIGHT Birthweight is an important indicator of the approxi- mate maturity of a newborn infant and the ability of that newborn infant to survive. The birthweight of an infant is dependent on the duration of the pregnancy and its rate of fetal growth. Infants who are delivered earlier than normal are expected to be of smaller birthweight than average. Additionally, infants who had slower or faster fetal growth can also have lower or higher than usual birthweights. Figure 1 portrays the birthweight distribution of singleton live births (babies born singly) to U.S. resident mothers from 1995 to 1997. The graph reveals a somewhat bell- shaped distribution with most births (about 80%) con- centrated between 2,750 and 4,250 grams (between 6 pounds and 9 pounds, 4 ounces). The median birth- weight for U.S. singleton, full-term (forty weeks of gestation) births is nearly 3,500 grams (7 pounds, 11 ounces). The close relationship between an infant’s birth- weight and the risk of dying within the first year of life has long been recognized, and birthweight is often used by researchers as a measure of mortality risk. At light and heavy birthweights, an infant’s risk of mor- tality soars (see Figure 1), although in recent decades, heavier infant births have become less associated with high mortality risks, probably because of medical in- tervention. Nevertheless, very light infants continue to be at grave risk of mortality, morbidity (disease), and long-term developmental problems. Populations with more infants born at very high or very low birthweights predictably have higher in- fant mortality rates. Therefore, it is an established procedure to take birthweight into account when making comparisons of mortality among newborn populations. Whether the comparison involves tem- poral, geographic, socioeconomic, hospital, or other contrasts, infant mortality differences are typically ex- amined within birthweight categories. Investigations of improving trends in infant mortality rates often start with an examination of the extent to which any changes are related to improvements in the distribu- tion of birthweights within categories (e.g., fewer births at extreme birthweights), as opposed to reduc- tions in birthweight-specific mortality rates (e.g., in- fants in specific birthweight categories having better survival). Nearly all of the decline in infant mortality rates in the United States in the last quarter of the twenti- eth century was due to improvements in survival rath- er than any improvement in the birthweight distribution. Better survival within birthweight groups has been attributed to advances in obstetric and newborn medical care. The increasing medical care costs that have accompanied these advances, however, raise concerns about overly relying on medi- cal technology to reduce infant death rates. Accord- ingly, research attention has been directed at finding the determinants of low birthweight in order to devel- op more cost-effective, population-wide programs to further diminish infant mortality. Variations of average birthweight have been asso- ciated with infant gender, multiple birth factors, and maternal factors, such as race and ethnicity, size, nu- trition, and current and previous pregnancy medical risk characteristics. One of the unresolved questions among researchers is whether there is a single com- mon average human birthweight or whether there are normal variations in average birthweight among pop- ulation subgroups. This question entails important medical care, public health policy, and political as- pects as it engenders debate about what is a ‘‘normal’’ birthweight, what is a ‘‘high-risk’’ birthweight, and whether a single ‘‘one-size-fits-all’’ criteria for high- risk birthweights is equally valid for all infants.
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