Every unit increase in maternal BMI raised risk for infant death by 4%.
Obesity is a growing epidemic worldwide among women of reproductive age. To investigate associations between maternal overweight or obesity and infant mortality, researchers conducted a population-based cohort study including some 1,900,000 live-born singletons delivered in Sweden between 1992 and 2010.
In analyses adjusted for year of delivery, maternal age, parity, smoking, education, height, and country of birth, infant death was more common when mothers were overweight or obese during early pregnancy than when mothers had a healthy body-mass index (BMI); those with BMI >35 kg/m2 had twice the risk for infant mortality from both preterm births and deaths of term infants. For mothers with BMI ≥40, compared with normal-weight women, infant …
Reviewing Author
DisclosuresConsultant/Advisory BoardPlanned Parenthood Federation of America
Grant/Research SupportSociety of Family Planning; California Department of Public Health Tobacco Control Program
Editorial BoardsContraception; Journal of General Internal Medicine
Leadership Positions in Professional SocietiesCouncil Member, Society of General Internal Medicine
DisclosuresConsultant/Advisory BoardPlanned Parenthood Federation of America
Grant/Research SupportSociety of Family Planning; California Department of Public Health Tobacco Control Program
Editorial BoardsContraception; Journal of General Internal Medicine
Leadership Positions in Professional SocietiesCouncil Member, Society of General Internal Medicine