Hmong Women: Characteristics and Birth Outcomes, 1990

Abstract
Current demographic characteristics and pregnancy outcomes of immigrant Hmong women in a small town in southeastern United States were documented in a retrospective study. Interviews and review of existing records were used to determine prenatal practices and perceived problems. Sixteen health professionals and two women from the community were interviewed, and the labor and delivery records from 1985 to 1990 were reviewed for parity, child spacing, and health status of the women and newborns. The greatest concerns voiced by health caregivers were multiparity and the need for contraceptive compliance. Seventy-eight full-term infants were born to 64 women in five years, with 2 stillbirths. No eclampsia, diabetes, or Rh incompatibilities were noted. Evidence is limited that birth frequency or outcome for Hmong women is a problem. Their perinatal difficulties were thought to be sociocultural rather than medical. Further study of the effects of acculturation on maternal family position, perinatal risks, and birth outcomes is imperative as lifestyle and environment change for these immigrant women.

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