Environmental Risk and Adverse Perinatal Health Indicators in New York City: A Geospatial Hotspot Analysis
摘要
Environmental exposures can have adverse associations with perinatal health and birth outcomes. This study aimed to identify the overlap and association between urban areas of environmental risk and adverse perinatal health indicator hotspots in New York City. We examined 2101 census tracts representing 575,257 births from 2016 to 2020 recorded by the New York City Bureau of Vital Statistics looking at preterm birth, adolescent pregnancy, and pre-pregnancy obesity rates. The Getis-Ord Gi* statistic was used to identify geospatial hotspots of adverse indicators. We used multivariable logistic regression to assess associations between areas of environmental risk and odds of indicator hotspot status and Poisson regression to assess associations of hotspot overlap. Overall, 54.6% of environmental risk areas were hotspots for at least one adverse perinatal indicator, accounting for 63.7% of preterm birth hotspots, 93.7% of adolescent pregnancy hotspots, and 67.3% of pre-pregnancy obesity hotspots. Compared with non-risk areas, risk areas had greater odds of being a hotspot of preterm birth (aOR = 2.11; 95% CI 1.60–2.78), adolescent pregnancy (aOR = 32.8; 21.8–49.4), and pre-pregnancy obesity (aOR = 3.15; 2.56–3.87). Environmental risk areas were expected to have 3.36 times the number of overlapping hotspots after adjusting for parental birthplace and parity. The overlap between environmental risk areas and hotspots of adverse perinatal health indicators and the associations with individual indicators and overlapping hotspots suggest that environmental risk area designation may be a useful measure of perinatal health vulnerability for targeted community interventions.