Chapter 1 Reproductive Health Epidemiologyy
Chapter 1 Reproductive Health Epidemiologyy
Chapter 1 Reproductive Health Epidemiologyy
Reproductive Health
Epidemiology
Introduction
Scope of Study
Epidemiology
defined
Reproductive
health
epidemiology
History
Origins of Reproductive Epidemiology
Early Advances
delivered in the hospital by medical students than among women whose babies
were delivered by midwives. He correctly attributed this difference to the
midwives' practice of washing their hands between deliveries (MacMahon and
Pugh, 1970).
Modern reproductive epidemiology has evolved substantially during the 20th
century. The advent of birth and death registries, which were established in the
United States during the early part of this century and in Europe during the 18th
and 19th centuries, gave health officials a means of identifying risk factors for
maternal and infant mortality. Public health measures could then be designed to
reduce these factors. For example, milk stations, which provided milk to nursing
mothers, were established when a relationship was found between infant
mortality, sanitation, and nutrition (Holland et al., 1984). This and similar
measures led to a 95% decrease in maternal mortality in the United States from
1915 to 1965 (Hogue CJR, personal communication). In Sweden, the infant
mortality rate declined from 200 deaths per 1,000 live births in the 1750s to less
than 20 per 1,000 in the 1950s (United Nations, 1963).
Stages of
demographic
transition
Chapter 1
Stages of
epidemiologic
transition
Chapter 1
Table 1.1
Reproductive Health Around the World
Chapter 1
These data highlight the urgent need worldwide for improved family planning
and maternal and child health services. The availability of existing contraceptives
should also be improved, and new methods should be developed and tested.
Epidemiologic research has an important role in improving each of these areas.
Example 1
Shunyi Risk
Approach
Project in
Perinatal
Health
The Shunyi Risk Approach Project in Perinatal Health (Yan et al., 1989),
which was conducted in Shunyi County, People's Republic of China, shows how
epidemiologic methods are applied to problem definition, intervention and
testing, and program evaluation. The project used the risk approach in an
attempt to improve perinatal health services. It began in 1983 and continued for
five years.
Problem definition. Investigators collected data on 1,914 pregnant women
and their 1,928 infants, and on 50 cases of perinatal mortality. Among other
problems, the investigators found that 151 per 1,000 women suffered from
hypertensive disorders during pregnancy, and 1 per 1,000 suffered from
eclampsia. The perinatal mortality rate for
Chapter 1
the infants born to these women was elevated. For example, the perinatal
mortality rate for infants born to women who experienced mild to severe
hypertension that improved during pregnancy was 4.6 per 1,000 deliveries,
or more than twice the rate for pregnancies uncomplicated by these
disorders. The rate for infants born to women with hypertensive disorders
that worsened or remained severe throughout pregnancy was 10.8 per 1,000
deliveries.
Table 1.2
Uses of Epidemiologic Methods in Reproductive Health Practice
Uses
Problems Addressed
Problem definition
Population affected
Risk factor identification
Surveillance
Program evaluation
Risk approach
Cost-effectiveness
Example 2
Surveillance
of maternal
smoking and
pregnancy
outcome
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Chapter 1
11
References
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Hogue CJR, Sappenfield W. Smoking and low birth weight: current concepts.
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Hogue CJR, Buehler JW, Strauss LT, Smith JC. Overview of the National
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