Multiple-race mothers on the California birth certificate, 2000.
Autor: | Heck KE; National Center for Health Statistics , Sacramento, California, USA. kheck@dhs.ca.gov, Parker JD, McKendry CJ, Schoendorf KC |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Zdroj: | Ethnicity & disease [Ethn Dis] 2001 Fall; Vol. 11 (4), pp. 626-32. |
Abstrakt: | Objectives: Several data systems are beginning to allow respondents to report more than one race. Implications of multiple race reporting for the tabulation of race-specific birth characteristics are largely unknown. This analysis reports selected demographic characteristics and birth outcomes for multiple-race mothers, using California birth certificate data for 2000. Design: Descriptive study of birth records. Methods: Data were drawn from 530,305 electronically registered births. Demographics and birth outcomes were analyzed by race of mother for six multiple-race/ethnic groups with >300 births. Results: 1.7% of mothers reported more than one race on the birth certificate. The most common multiple-race group reported was non-Hispanic Asian/White, followed by Hispanic/American Indian or Alaska Native/White. Characteristics varied widely among multiple-race subgroups, as well as between multiple-race groups and their single-race counterparts. For example, among multiple-race mothers, the proportion of births to teenage mothers was lowest among non-Hispanic Asian/White mothers (9%); this was significantly higher than percentages for non-Hispanic Asian or non-Hispanic White mothers (4% and 6%, respectively). Conclusions: Understanding the influence of multiple-race reporting on trends and comparisons in birth outcomes will be a challenge for public health researchers. |
Databáze: | MEDLINE |
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