Journal article
Co-causation of reduced newborn size by maternal undernutrition, infections, and inflammation
P Ashorn, L Hallamaa, LH Allen, U Ashorn, U Chandrasiri, M Deitchler, R Doyle, U Harjunmaa, JM Jorgensen, S Kamiza, N Klein, K Maleta, M Nkhoma, BM Oaks, B Poelman, SJ Rogerson, CP Stewart, M Zeilani, KG Dewey
Maternal and Child Nutrition | WILEY | Published : 2018
DOI: 10.1111/mcn.12585
Abstract
More than 20 million babies are born with low birthweight annually. Small newborns have an increased risk for mortality, growth failure, and other adverse outcomes. Numerous antenatal risk factors for small newborn size have been identified, but individual interventions addressing them have not markedly improved the health outcomes of interest. We tested a hypothesis that in low-income settings, newborn size is influenced jointly by multiple maternal exposures and characterized pathways associating these exposures with newborn size. This was a prospective cohort study of pregnant women and their offspring nested in an intervention trial in rural Malawi. We collected information on maternal a..
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Grants
Awarded by United States Agency for International Development
Funding Acknowledgements
Office of Health, Infectious Diseases, and Nutrition, Bureau for Global Health, U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), Grant/Award Number: AID-OAA-A-12-00005; The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Grant/Award Number: OPP49817; Medical Research Fund of Tampere University Hospital, Grant/Award Numbers: 9M004 and 9 M004; Academy of Finland, Grant/Award Number: 252075