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Title: Births to unmarried mothers: trends and obstetric outcomes. Author: Amini SB, Catalano PM, Mann LI. Journal: Womens Health Issues; 1996; 6(5):264-72. PubMed ID: 8870505. Abstract: This study examines trends in nonmarital childbearing among women who represent an inner-city urban population that includes high-risk privately insured mothers and a large number of indigent mothers. The study population includes data collected from a computerized database at the MetroHealth Medical Center in Cleveland, Ohio, during 1974-93, on 73,544 births. The subsample for the clinical analysis is based on 29,865 deliveries that occurred during 1987-93. Findings indicate that the proportion of deliveries to unmarried mothers increased by at least 20% over a 19-year period. The proportion of privately insured unmarried mothers increased from 6.7% to 27.3% during 1975-93. The proportion of staff-funded mothers increased from 63.5% to 77.5%. The proportion increased for all races, funding groups, and age groups. In the subsample of births during 1987-93, there were 51% Whites, 38% Blacks, 8% Hispanics, and 3% other. Only 15% had private medical insurance. 34.2% of births were to married mothers. 38% of births were to women who were smokers, 3.2% were alcohol users, and 15.4% were narcotic users. 15.4% were cesarean births. The infant mortality rate was 13/1000 live births. Unmarried mothers tended to be about four years younger than married mothers. Over 30% of unmarried mothers and only 10% of married mothers were teenagers. 48% of White mothers, 14% of Black mothers, 35% of Hispanic mothers, and 70% of mothers of other race were married at the time of delivery. The mean birth weight for unmarried mothers was 100 g less than for married mothers. Significant predictors of mothers' marital status were insurance status, race, age, and their interaction. The odds of unmarried status increased with younger age, delivery later in the study period, race, insurance pay status, and parity, which, when controlled for, showed Black and Hispanic mothers with increased odds of an unmarried status. Significantly more unmarried mothers had infants with thick meconium, premature delivery, and fetal distress among neonates.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]