Objective: Research suggests that exposure to racism partially explains why African American women are 2 to 3 times more likely to deliver low birth weight and preterm infants. However, the physiological pathways by which racism exerts these effects are unclear. This study examined how lifetime exposure to racism, in combination with maternal blood pressure changes during pregnancy, was associated with fetal growth. Methods: African American pregnant women (n = 39) reported exposure to childhood and adulthood racism in several life domains (e.g., at school, at work), which were experienced directly or indirectly, meaning vicariously experienced when someone close to them was treated unfairly. A research nurse measured maternal blood pressur...
Black women have uniquely stressful pregnancies as a result of their intersecting racial and gender ...
Objectives. We determined whether African American women’s lifetime exposure to interpersonal racial...
Introduction. Adverse perinatal outcomes can have lifelong and transgenerational consequences. Socia...
Objective: Research suggests that exposure to racism partially explains why African American women a...
ObjectiveResearch suggests that exposure to racism partially explains why African American women are...
Currently, racial and ethnic differences in adverse birth outcomes and infant mortality are some of ...
Black mothers in the United States have significantly higher mortality rates than all other American...
OBJECTIVE: To extend findings that African American women report greater stress during pregnancy, ha...
Despite decreases in infants born premature and at low birth weight in the United States (U.S.), rac...
Stress due to experiences of racism could contribute to African-American women's adverse birth outco...
Objectives: Stress due to experiences of racism could contribute to African-American women’s adverse...
Compared with European Americans, African American infants experience disproportionately high rates ...
Objective: This study examined the role of psychosocial stress in racial differences in birth outcom...
Among US racial/ethnic minority women, we examined associations between maternal experiences of raci...
Prior research on racial disparities in maternal health reveals a relationship between racism and pr...
Black women have uniquely stressful pregnancies as a result of their intersecting racial and gender ...
Objectives. We determined whether African American women’s lifetime exposure to interpersonal racial...
Introduction. Adverse perinatal outcomes can have lifelong and transgenerational consequences. Socia...
Objective: Research suggests that exposure to racism partially explains why African American women a...
ObjectiveResearch suggests that exposure to racism partially explains why African American women are...
Currently, racial and ethnic differences in adverse birth outcomes and infant mortality are some of ...
Black mothers in the United States have significantly higher mortality rates than all other American...
OBJECTIVE: To extend findings that African American women report greater stress during pregnancy, ha...
Despite decreases in infants born premature and at low birth weight in the United States (U.S.), rac...
Stress due to experiences of racism could contribute to African-American women's adverse birth outco...
Objectives: Stress due to experiences of racism could contribute to African-American women’s adverse...
Compared with European Americans, African American infants experience disproportionately high rates ...
Objective: This study examined the role of psychosocial stress in racial differences in birth outcom...
Among US racial/ethnic minority women, we examined associations between maternal experiences of raci...
Prior research on racial disparities in maternal health reveals a relationship between racism and pr...
Black women have uniquely stressful pregnancies as a result of their intersecting racial and gender ...
Objectives. We determined whether African American women’s lifetime exposure to interpersonal racial...
Introduction. Adverse perinatal outcomes can have lifelong and transgenerational consequences. Socia...