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Socio-cultural disparities in GDM burden differ by maternal age at first delivery

Several socio-cultural and biomedical risk factors for gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) are modifiable. However, few studies globally have examined socio-cultural associations. To eliminate confounding of increased risk of diabetes in subsequent pregnancies, elucidating socio-cultural association...

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Published in:PloS one 2015-02, Vol.10 (2), p.e0117085-e0117085
Main Authors: Abouzeid, Marion, Versace, Vincent L, Janus, Edward D, Davey, Mary-Ann, Philpot, Benjamin, Oats, Jeremy, Dunbar, James A
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description Several socio-cultural and biomedical risk factors for gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) are modifiable. However, few studies globally have examined socio-cultural associations. To eliminate confounding of increased risk of diabetes in subsequent pregnancies, elucidating socio-cultural associations requires examination only of first pregnancies. Data for all women who delivered their first child in Victoria, Australia between 1999 and 2008 were extracted from the Victorian Perinatal Data Collection. Crude and adjusted GDM rates were calculated. Multivariate logistic regression was used to examine odds of GDM within and between socio-cultural groups. From 1999 to 2008, 269,682 women delivered their first child in Victoria. GDM complicated 11,763 (4.4%) pregnancies and burden increased with maternal age, from 2.1% among women aged below 25 years at delivery to 7.0% among those aged 35 years or more. Among younger women, GDM rates were relatively stable across socioeconomic levels. Amongst older women GDM rates were highest in those living in most deprived areas, with a strong social gradient. Asian-born mothers had highest GDM rates. All migrant groups except women born in North-West Europe had higher odds of GDM than Australian-born non-Indigenous women. In all ethnic groups, these differences were not pronounced among younger mothers, but became increasingly apparent amongst older women. Socio-cultural disparities in GDM burden differ by maternal age at first delivery. Socio-cultural gradients were not evident among younger women. Health and social programs should seek to reduce the risk amongst all older women to that of the least deprived older mothers.
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subjects Aboriginal Australians
Adult
Age
Councils
Country of birth
Cultural groups
Data collection
Delivery, Obstetric
Diabetes
Diabetes mellitus
Diabetes, Gestational - epidemiology
Diabetes, Gestational - ethnology
Diabetes, Gestational - physiopathology
Epidemiology
Female
Gestational diabetes
Gravidity
Gynecology
Health care
Health risks
Humans
Maternal Age
Minority & ethnic groups
Morbidity
Mortality
Neighborhoods
Obstetrics
Pregnancy
Pregnant women
Preventive medicine
Risk analysis
Risk factors
Risk reduction
Social aspects
Social Class
Socioeconomic factors
Victoria - epidemiology
Women's health
Womens health
title Socio-cultural disparities in GDM burden differ by maternal age at first delivery
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