Jail Incarceration and Birth Outcomes
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Date
2004Author
Bell, Janice F.
Zimmerman, Frederick J.
Cawthon, Mary L.
Huebner, Colleen E.
Ward, Deborah H.
Schroeder, Carole A.
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Show full item recordAbstract
This study examined the relationships between jail incarceration during
pregnancy and infant birth weight, preterm birth, and fetal growth restriction. We used
multivariate regression analyses to compare outcomes for 496 births to women who were
in jail for part of pregnancy with 4,960 Medicaid-funded births as matched community
controls. After adjusting for potential confounding variables, the relationship between
jail incarceration and birth outcomes was modified by maternal age. Relative to controls,
women incarcerated during pregnancy had progressively higher odds of low birth
weight and preterm birth through age 39 years; conversely, jail detainees older than
39 years were less likely than controls to experience low birth weight or preterm birth.
For women in jail at all ages, postrelease maternity case management was associated
with decreased odds of low birth weight, whereas prenatal care was associated with
decreased odds of preterm birth. Local jails are important sites for public health intervention.
Efforts to ensure that all pregnant women released from jail have access to
enhanced prenatal health services may improve perinatal outcomes for this group of
particularly vulnerable women and infants.