Results of the Recent Immigrant Pregnancy and Perinatal Long-term Evaluation Study (RIPPLES)
Open Access
- 8 May 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by CMA Impact Inc. in CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association Journal
- Vol. 176 (10) , 1419-1426
- https://doi.org/10.1503/cmaj.061680
Abstract
Background: People who immigrate to Western nations may experience fewer chronic health problems than original residents of those countries, which raises concerns about long-term environmental or lifestyle factors in those countries. We tested whether the “healthy immigrant effect” extends to the risk of placental dysfunction during the short interval of pregnancy. Methods: We conducted a population-based retrospective cohort study of data for 796 105 women who had a first documented obstetric delivery in Ontario between 1995 and 2005. Recency of immigration was determined for each woman as the time from her enrolment in universal health insurance to her date of delivery, classified as less than 3 months, 3–5 months, 6–11 months, 12–23 months, 24–35 months, 36–47 months, 48–59 months and 5 years or more (the referent). The primary composite outcome was maternal placental syndrome (defined as a diagnosis of pre-eclampsia or eclampsia, placental abruption or placental infarction). Results: The mean age of the women was 28.8 years. Maternal placental syndrome occurred in 45 216 women (5.7%). The risk of this outcome was lowest among the women who had immigrated less than 3 months before delivery (3.8%) and highest among those living in Ontario at least 5 years (6.0%), for a crude odds ratio (OR) of 0.62 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.54–0.71). After adjustment for maternal age, income status, pre-existing hypertension, diabetes mellitus, multiple gestation and receipt of prenatal ultrasonography, the risk of maternal placental syndrome was correlated with the number of months since immigration in a gradient manner (OR, 95% CI): less than 3 months (0.53, 0.47–0.61), 3–5 months (0.68, 0.61–0.76), 6–11 months (0.67, 0.63–0.71), 12–23 months (0.69, 0.66–0.73), 24–35 months (0.75, 0.70–0.79), 36–47 months (0.75, 0.70–0.80) and 48–59 months (0.82, 0.77–0.87). Interpretation: There was a progressively lower risk of maternal placental syndromes associated with recency of immigration. The “healthy immigrant effect” may extend to common placental disorders, diminishes with the duration of residency and underscores the importance of nongenetic determinants of maternal health accrued over a brief period.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Uterine Spiral Arteries In Human Pregnancy: Facts and ControversiesPlacenta, 2006
- The healthy migrant theory: Variations in pregnancy outcomes among US-born migrantsSocial Science & Medicine, 2006
- Maternal Ethnicity, Paternal Ethnicity, and Parental Ethnic DiscordanceObstetrics & Gynecology, 2005
- Prevention of Pediatric Overweight and ObesityPediatrics, 2003
- Left Out: Immigrants’ Access To Health Care And InsuranceHealth Affairs, 2001
- Body mass index in a US national sample of Asian Americans: effects of nativity, years since immigration and socioeconomic statusInternational Journal of Obesity, 2000
- Risks of preeclampsia and adverse neonatal outcomes among women with pregestational diabetes mellitusAmerican Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2000
- Adverse pregnancy outcomes: differences between US- and foreign-born women in major US racial and ethnic groups.American Journal of Public Health, 1996
- The influence of race and previous pregnancy outcome on outcomes in the current pregnancySeminars in Perinatology, 1995
- Epidemiology of Diseases among MigrantsInternational Migration, 1992