
Association between maternal work activity on birth weight and gestational age
Author(s) -
Omid Aminian,
S A Sharifian,
Nazanin Izadi,
Khosro Sadeghniiat,
Anahita Rashedi
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
asian pacific journal of reproduction
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.167
H-Index - 17
eISSN - 2305-0519
pISSN - 2305-0500
DOI - 10.1016/s2305-0500(14)60026-9
Subject(s) - birth weight , medicine , gestational age , obstetrics , logistic regression , gestation , pregnancy , low birth weight , demography , biology , genetics , sociology
Objective: To evaluate the effect of maternal employment on birth weight and gestational age.Methods: In this project, 1 272 pregnant women were recruited from whom referred to Tehran hospitals during 1 year via randomized sampling. Data were gathered through history taking and medical records. In this study, 564 employed women were classified as exposure group and 708 housekeepers were as the control group. Chi square test, t-test, One-way ANOVA and logistic regression were used to analyze data.Results: In this study, mean mother age was 25.01 years and mean birth weight was (2 884±684) g. The mean birth weight in housekeepers was significantly higher (2 991±457 g) than employees (2 726±476 g) (P=0.002). The infants' mean birth weights in farmer were the lowest and in office workers (2 831±526 g) was the highest (P<0.01). Gestational age less than 37 weeks was more common among employees. The mean birth weight decreased when the working hours increased (P<0.01). In those mothers who were working less than 3 months there were a higher mean birth weight (P<0.01). Also the mean birth weight decreased due to the hours of standing during a day.Conclusion: Women employment during pregnancy has an important role in low birth weight and preterm labor compared to those who do not work