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Volume 5: No. 4, October 2008

ORIGINAL RESEARCH
Attempted Breastfeeding Before Hospital Discharge on Both Sides of the US-Mexico Border, 2005: The Brownsville-Matamoros Sister City Project for Women’s Health


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Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
Acknowledgments
Author Information
References
Tables


Brian C. Castrucci, MA, Leticia E. Piña Carrizales, MD, Denise V. D’Angelo, MPH, Jill A. McDonald, PhD, Hillary Foulkes, MPH, Indu B. Ahluwalia, PhD, Ginger L. Gossman, PhD, Juan Acuña, MD, MSc, Tracy Erickson, RD, LD, Kathy Clatanoff, RN, MSN, Kayan Lewis, PhD, Gita Mirchandani, PhD, MPH, Brian Smith, MD

Suggested citation for this article: Castrucci BC, Piña Carrizales LE, D’Angelo DV, McDonald JA, Foulkes H, Ahluwalia IB, et al. Attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge on both sides of the US-Mexico border, 2005: the Brownsville-Matamoros Sister City Project for Women’s Health. Prev Chronic Dis 2008;5(4).  http://www.cdc.gov/pcd/issues/2008/
oct/08_0058.htm
. Accessed [date].

PEER REVIEWED

Abstract

Introduction
The US-Mexico border region has a growing population and limited health care infrastructure. Preventive health behaviors such as breastfeeding ease the burden on this region’s health care system by reducing morbidity and health care costs. We examined correlates of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge on each side of the US-Mexico border and within the border region.

Methods
The cross-sectional study included women who delivered a live infant in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico (n = 489), and Cameron County, Texas (n = 457), which includes Brownsville, Texas. We interviewed women before hospital discharge from August 21 through November 9, 2005. We used multivariate logistic regression to estimate the odds of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge in Cameron County, Texas, the municipality of Matamoros, Mexico, and the 2 communities combined.

Results
Prevalence of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge was 81.9% in Matamoros compared with 63.7% in Cameron County. After adjusting for potential confounders, the odds of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge were 90% higher in Matamoros than in Cameron County (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 1.93; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.31-2.84 for the combined model). In the 2 communities combined, odds of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge were higher among women who had a vaginal delivery than among women who had a cesarean delivery (AOR, 1.98; 95% CI, 1.43-2.75) and were lower among women who delivered infants with a low birth weight than among women who delivered infants with a normal birth weight (AOR, 0.26; 95% CI, 0.15-0.44).

Conclusion
The rate of attempted breastfeeding in Matamoros was significantly higher than in Cameron County. Additional breastfeeding support and messages on the US side of the US-Mexico border are needed.

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Introduction

Between 1950 and 2000, the US-Mexico border population increased by approximately 10 million people (1). This growth is expected to continue. Conservative estimates predict a 34% increase in population between 2000 and 2030, and more liberal estimates suggest a 97% increase (2). Population growth on the border has led to quality-of-life improvements such as paved streets and access to education. However, this population growth is also a potential burden on the health care system, which could result in limited health care access and contribute to significant cross-border use of services (3,4). In a region with limited health care infrastructure, increasing the prevalence of preventive health behaviors such as breastfeeding may ease the burden on the health care system by reducing morbidity and health care costs.

Human milk is a more beneficial form of nutrition for infants than formula (5,6). Breastfeeding has proven short-term and long-term maternal and infant health benefits and reduces health care costs (5-10). Infants who are breastfed have reduced incidence and severity of several infectious diseases (5,6). Breastfeeding has been associated with a lower risk of childhood overweight and obesity, diabetes, asthma, and some cancers (5,6). Women who breastfeed experience increased postpartum weight loss, decreased risk of women’s cancers, and possibly improved bone health during the postmenopausal period (5,6).

Studies of breastfeeding in the US-Mexico border region have focused on samples from the United States (11-23) and have explored acculturation (11-17) and the effect of nativity, ethnicity, and immigration on breastfeeding rates (18-23). Interest in binational approaches to health promotion is increasing, and information is needed to assess the prevalence and correlates of breastfeeding in the border region. Despite this need, differences in data collection, measurement practices, and confidentiality issues, stemming from legal and cultural restrictions, inhibit the sharing of information across the US-Mexico border (24). We eliminated the challenges of binational data collection by using identical sampling and survey instruments on each side of the US-Mexico border.

The purpose of this study was to determine the rates of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge among women who recently gave birth in the US-Mexico border region, using data collected in 1 of 14 pairs of sister cities located on the US-Mexico border: Brownsville, Texas, and Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico (25) (Figure).

Map of the Brownsville/Matamoros area

[ View enlarged image and descriptive text. ]

Figure. Maps of the US-Mexico Border Region (Top) and of Brownsville, Texas, and Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico (Bottom). (The authors thank Allison Abell Banicki of the Office of Border Health, Texas Department of State Health Services, for creating the map of the Texas-Mexico border states and thank Jean W. Parcher, Sylvia N. Wilson, and the United States Geological Survey [USGS] for providing the map of population density in Brownsville and Matamoros.)

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Methods

Data collection

We used data that were collected as part of the Brownsville-Matamoros Sister City Project for Women’s Health (BMSCP). The BMSCP pilot project was reviewed for human subject concerns by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and was determined to be “nonresearch” or public health practice. Therefore, institutional review board approval was not required. The study used a stratified, systematic, cluster-sampling probability design to select women who delivered live infants in Matamoros, Mexico, and Cameron County, Texas. Strata were hospitals with 100 deliveries or more per year in either location. We used systematic sampling to select specific days within each stratum, and every woman who gave birth on selected days (within a cluster of days) was included in the sample. Of the 999 women sampled on selected days from August 21 through November 9, 2005 in hospitals with 100 or more deliveries per year, 947 (95%) completed interviews. A more thorough description of the data collection process and other methods used in the BMSCP is available in this issue of Preventing Chronic Disease (26).

Measures

The outcome variable of interest was attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge. Women were asked, “Have you ever tried to breastfeed your new baby?” One respondent did not provide a response for the outcome variable and was eliminated from the analysis. The final unweighted sample was 946 women, distributed between Matamoros (n = 489) and Cameron County (n = 457). A detailed list of measures used in this study is presented in Table 1.

Data analysis

We weighted the data to account for probability of selection, population noncoverage, hospital noncoverage, and nonresponse. We used SUDAAN version 9.01 (RTI International, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina) to account for the complex survey design. Data were analyzed by place of residence and for the 2 communities combined. We used the χ2 test for independence to assess differences in the prevalence of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge between women delivering in Matamoros and women delivering in Cameron County. Statistical significance was set at α = .05. We could not assess differences between either community and the overall combined sample because the combined data were a composite of the data from the individual communities, and observations were not independent.

To quantify the difference in the odds of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge by selected sociodemographic characteristics, health behaviors, and perinatal/delivery experiences, we used logistic regression analysis. Variables that were statistically significant (P <.05) in the bivariate analyses were included in the multivariate logistic regression models. In addition to these variables, we included variables that approached significance (P <.10 and >.05) in the logistic regression models to account for other potential sources of variance and confounders. Only variables with at least 30 cases unweighted per level were considered in the logistic regression analysis. Models were estimated separately for Cameron County and Matamoros and for the combined sample.

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Results

Distribution of demographic and behavioral variables, by place of residence, is presented in Table 2. Although only 5.0% of all Matamoros residents delivered in the United States, all Cameron County residents, with the exception of 1, delivered their infants in the United States. Nearly all residents in Matamoros completed the interview in Spanish. In Cameron County, the language in which the interview was completed was approximately evenly distributed between English and Spanish. The ethnicity of respondents from Cameron County was primarily Hispanic. Despite having a greater percentage of respondents report early entry into prenatal care, the percentage of low-birth-weight infants was higher in Cameron County than in Matamoros.

Sociodemographic characteristics and attempted breastfeeding

In Matamoros, the rate of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge was higher among respondents with fewer years of education (Table 3). In the multivariate model, respondents in Matamoros with fewer than 8 years of education were nearly twice as likely to attempt breastfeeding as were respondents with more than 12 years of education (Table 4). Respondents in Matamoros with 8 to 12 years of education were almost 3 times as likely to attempt breastfeeding as were respondents with more than 12 years of education.

The prevalence of attempted breastfeeding was 81.9% among the women who lived in Matamoros, compared with 63.7% among the women who lived in Cameron County (data not shown). In the multivariate analysis, residing in Matamoros was associated with nearly a 2-fold increase in the odds of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge (Table 4).

In Cameron County, non-Hispanic women had a greater prevalence of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge than did Hispanic women. After adjusting for other factors, Hispanic women who resided in Cameron County had decreased odds of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge compared with non-Hispanic women in Cameron County.

Perinatal experiences

Women who delivered vaginally had increased prevalence and odds of attempted breastfeeding in Matamoros and in the 2 communities combined (Tables 3 and 4). Prevalence of attempted breastfeeding was higher among women who delivered vaginally in Cameron County, but odds of attempted breastfeeding among these same women were not significant in the multivariate model.

In Matamoros, Cameron County, and the 2 communities combined, women who delivered a low-birth-weight infant (ie, <2,500 g) had a lower rate of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge than did women who delivered an infant of normal weight (ie, ≥2,500 g) (Table 3). In each of the multivariate logistic regression models, women who delivered a low-birth-weight infant were approximately 75% less likely to have attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge than were women who delivered infants of normal weight (Table 4).

Women with any previous live births had a higher prevalence of attempting to breastfeed in Matamoros, but the same was not true in Cameron County (Table 3). In the multivariate logistic regression model, women in Matamoros who had a previous live birth were nearly twice as likely to attempt breastfeeding before hospital discharge as were women who had not had a previous live birth. However, this was not true of the women in Cameron County (Table 4).

In Cameron County and in the 2 communities combined, women who indicated that their pregnancy was intended had a higher prevalence of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge than did women who indicated that their pregnancy was unintended (Table 3). In the multivariate logistic regression model, the odds of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge were 50% lower among women who identified their pregnancy as unintended than among women with intended pregnancies. In the combined model, the decrease in odds was 34% (Table 4).

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Discussion

The prevalence of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge was nearly 20 percentage points higher in Matamoros than in Cameron County, and the adjusted odds of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge among Matamoros residents were nearly twice the odds among Cameron County residents. The rates we report in Matamoros and Cameron County are lower than previously reported state rates on both sides of the US-Mexico border. Rates of ever breastfeeding in Texas have been reported to be 75% (27), and rates of ever breastfeeding in northern Mexico, an area that includes Tamaulipas, have been reported to be 91% (28). These statistics suggest that breastfeeding rates in border areas may be lower than statewide rates.

Most women’s first breastfeeding experience occurs in the hospital environment, and exclusive breastfeeding rates decline substantially after hospital discharge. Failure to establish breastfeeding during the hospital stay is a factor in breastfeeding cessation following hospital discharge (29). Although the importance of breastfeeding is highlighted in the United States at the national level in documents like Healthy People 2010 (30), no national policy exists to support breastfeeding.

Unlike the United States, Mexico has federal regulations that support breastfeeding. Mexico’s official norms for breastfeeding, or Ministry of Health clinical practice guidelines (La Norma Oficial Mexicana), support breastfeeding initiation within the first 2 hours after delivery when conditions permit; support and facilitate breastfeeding on infant demand; and include standards, criteria, and procedures that promote and protect exclusive breastfeeding (eg, standards for training and personnel, requirements that medical units provide appropriate conditions to enable mothers to practice exclusive breastfeeding and to educate mothers about the benefits of exclusive breastfeeding) (31). CAALMA Curso, a training program for hospital personnel, has been implemented throughout Mexico to support these federal regulations (32).

A study in Texas among WIC (Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children) recipients who breastfed found that 55% of women were not informed that breastfeeding could occur at the demand of the infant, 56% of women did not initiate breastfeeding in the first hour after delivery, and 74% of women reported their infants were fed something in addition to breast milk (33). At least 1 US study found that hospitals that adopted supportive breastfeeding policies have more patients who breastfeed and who breastfeed longer (34).

Another difference between the United States and Mexico is the provision of infant formula in hospitals. Federal regulations in Mexico restrict the distribution of formula in the hospital, the free distribution or promotion of breast milk substitutes by medical units, and the distribution of incentives to health care providers from the manufacturers of breast milk substitutes (31). Furthermore, in September 2007, an agreement (Acuerdo con Productores de Alimentos y Fórmulas Infantiles) was reached with Mexican health officials and manufacturers of infant formula to restrict the distribution of formula in the hospital, the free distribution or promotion of breast milk substitutes by medical units, and the distribution of incentives to health care providers from the manufacturers of breast milk substitutes (Cuitlahuac Ruiz Matus, MD, written communication, February 14, 2008). Similar regulations are not in place in the United States. In Texas, nearly three-quarters of women who received WIC benefits reported receiving formula before hospital discharge.

Women in our study who delivered infants weighing ≥2,500 g had increased odds of breastfeeding in Matamoros, Cameron County, and in the combined sample. Women who delivered vaginally had increased odds of breastfeeding in Matamoros and in the combined sample. These findings are consistent with previous studies and identify opportunities for cross-border collaboration (35-38). Cross-border work groups may design continuing education for providers or develop protocols and best practices that address the unique breastfeeding needs of women who deliver infants weighing <2,500 g or who have a cesarean delivery. In Mexico, strategies and best practices to increase breastfeeding among women in these vulnerable groups could be disseminated through the CAALMA Curso.

Women who did not intend to become pregnant had decreased odds of attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge in Cameron County and in the combined sample. Previous research on this association has shown mixed results (39-41). At least 1 study found an association between pregnancy intention and attempted breastfeeding before hospital discharge in the United States (40). However, studies in Bolivia and Paraguay did not find an association between these variables (40,41). Although practitioners should discuss breastfeeding with all pregnant women, more education and counseling may be needed for women whose pregnancy is unintended.

Our study has 2 limitations. The first limitation was with regard to duration of hospital stay. Women who delivered in Matamoros were typically discharged on the same day of their delivery, and women who delivered in Cameron County typically remained hospitalized for up to 48 hours after delivery. Therefore, women who delivered in Cameron County had more time to attempt to breastfeed than did women who delivered in Matamoros. Despite this difference, women who delivered in Matamoros still attempted to breastfeed at a greater rate than did women who delivered in Cameron County, suggesting that differences on the basis of place of residence would be larger if the length of hospital stay after delivery were equal. The second limitation is that previous infant feeding method was not included in the questionnaire. However, the exclusion of this variable most likely affected point estimates within the 2 locations rather than the estimate associated with place of residence.

If breastfeeding rates reached the goal of 75% in the early postpartum period established in Healthy People 2010 (29), the potential cost savings could exceed $1 billion (10). Results from this study are encouraging for Matamoros but indicate a need for additional breastfeeding support and messages in Cameron County. Because of the cross-border mobility of the population, joint US-Mexico strategies to promote breastfeeding are needed.

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Acknowledgments

The BMSCP was funded through the Division of Reproductive Health and the Office of Global Health Promotion at the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, CDC, under a cooperative agreement with the United States-Mexico Border Health Association, No. U65 CCU 623699-01-2, and through interagency personnel agreements with the University of Texas at Brownsville and Texas Southmost College and the University of Texas-Houston School of Public Health, Brownsville Regional Campus. In-kind project support was provided by the Division of Health Examination Statistics at the National Center for Health Statistics, CDC; the Texas Department of State Health Services, Region 11; the Secretariat of Health, Tamaulipas; and the Mexican Institute of Social Security, Tamaulipas.

In addition to contributions from these partners, support from the following local, regional, and national institutions was critical to the project: the National Center for Gender Equity and Reproductive Health, Mexican Health Secretariat; National Center for Epidemiologic Surveillance and Disease Control, Mexican Health Secretariat; National Center for Health Promotion, Mexican Health Secretariat; National Institute of Statistics, Geography and Informatics, Tamaulipas; Civil Registry, Tamaulipas; Institute of Social Security Serving State Workers, Tamaulipas; Secretariat of Health, Jurisdiction III, Tamaulipas; Texas Department of State Health Services, Region 11, and Office of Border Health; City of Brownsville Department of Public Health; Cameron County Health Department; Valley Baptist Medical Center in Harlingen; Valley Baptist Medical Center in Brownsville; Valley Regional Medical Center; Harlingen Medical Center; Cameron Park Cultural Center; Brownsville Community Health Center; General Hospital of Matamoros “Dr. Alfredo Pumarejo Lafaurie”; Mexican Institute of Social Security General Hospital, Zone 13, Matamoros; Dr Manuel F. Rodríguez Brayda Clinical Hospital, Matamoros; Hospital Guadalupe; Matamoros Center of Family Orientation; Medical Center of Surgical Specialties of Matamoros; and the United States-Mexico Border Health Commission. Special thanks to the National Center for Gender Equity and Reproductive Health, Secretariat of Health, Mexico, for review of this manuscript and to the United States-Mexico Border Health Commission for providing the English-Spanish translation.

The findings and conclusions of this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Texas Department of State Health Services or other institutions with which the authors are affiliated.

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Author Information

Corresponding Author: Brian C. Castrucci, MA, Office of Title V, Division of Family and Community Health Services, Texas Department of State Health Services, 1100 West 49th St, Austin, TX 78756. Telephone: 512-458-7111, ext 2006. E-mail: brian.castrucci@dshs.state.tx.us.

Author Affiliations: Leticia E. Piña Carrizales, Jurisdiction III, Secretariat of Health, Tamaulipas, Mexico; Denise V. D’Angelo, Jill A. McDonald, Juan Acuña, Division of Reproductive Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (NCCDPHP), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Atlanta, Georgia; Hillary Foulkes, Ginger L. Gossman, Kathy Clatanoff, Kayan Lewis, Gita Mirchandani, Office of Title V, Division of Family and Community Health Services, Texas Department of State Health Services, Austin, Texas; Indu B. Ahluwalia, Division of Adult and Community Health, NCCDPHP, CDC, Atlanta, Georgia; Tracy Erickson, Nutrition Services Section, Division of Family and Community Health Services, Texas Department of State Health Services, Austin, Texas; Brian Smith, MD, Region 8 Medical Director, Division of Regional and Local Health Services, Texas Department of State Health Services, Harlingen, Texas.

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Tables

Return to your place in the textTable 1. Study Measures, Brownsville-Matamoros Sister City Project, Brownsville, Texas, and Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico, August 21-November 9, 2005

Indicator

Question

Definition

Sociodemographic characteristics

Ethnicity

Do you consider yourself to be of Hispanic or Latino origin or descent?

Respondents who resided in Mexico were classified as Hispanic. Respondents who resided in the United States were classified on the basis of their responses to the question (ie, Hispanic or Non-Hispanic). Therefore, ethnicity could not be included in analyses limited to Matamoros only.

Age

What is your birth date?

Age was calculated using date of birth and date of interview. On the basis of mean age (25 y), women were divided into 2 groups (<25 y and ≥25 y).

Marital status

What is your marital status now?

Marital status was dichotomized: 1) married or living as married and 2) not married. Women who indicated that they were “married” or “live-in significant other/consensual union” were classified as married. Women who indicated they were “single,” “widowed,” or “divorced/separated” were classified as not married.

Education

What was the highest grade or level of school you have completed or the highest degree you have received?

Education was divided into 3 groups based on the number of years in school each woman had completed (<8 y, 8-12 y, >12 y).

Employment status

During the 3 months before you got pregnant with your new baby, which of the following best describes your employment status?

Women who responded “employed for wages, money, or a paycheck” or “self-employed” were categorized as employed. Women who responded “out of work” were categorized as unemployed. Women who responded “homemaker,” “student,” “retired,” or “unable to work” were categorized as not in labor force.

Mother’s place of birth

In what country were you born?

Possible responses included “Mexico,” “the United States,” “other,” and “don’t know.” Women who responded “other” and “don’t know” were combined into a single group.

Place of residence

In what country do you live?

Possible responses included “United States,” “Mexico,” “both,” “don’t know/not sure,” and “refused.” Women who responded “both” or “don’t know/not sure” and women whose place of residence was not recorded were assigned a place of residence on the basis of their place of delivery.

Place of delivery

NA

Place of delivery was recorded at the time of interview. Interviews were conducted in hospitals in Cameron County, Texas, or Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico.

Language spoken during interview

The language in which the interview was conducted was recorded by the interviewer.

The language spoken during the interview was used as a proxy for the primary language of the participant. A respondent who used any Spanish during the interview was classified as Spanish speaker. A respondent who did not use any Spanish during the interview was classified as English speaker.

Health behaviors

Smoking status

Have you smoked at least 100 cigarettes in the past 2 years? A pack has 20 cigarettes.

In the 3 months before you got pregnant, how many cigarettes did you smoke on an average day? A pack has 20 cigarettes.

Tobacco use was created from 2 variables that measured smoked 100 cigarettes in the past 2 years and number of cigarettes smoked on an average day 3 months before this pregnancy. A respondent who had not smoked 100 cigarettes in the past 2 years or had smoked zero cigarettes on an average day 3 months before this pregnancy was classified as a nonsmoker. A respondent who had smoked 100 cigarettes in the past 2 years or who had smoked any cigarettes on an average day 3 months before this pregnancy was classified as a smoker.

Alcohol use

Have you had any alcoholic drinks in the past 2 years? A drink is 1 glass of wine, wine cooler, can or bottle of beer, shot of liquor, or mixed drink.

During the 3 months before you got pregnant, how many alcoholic drinks did you have in an average week?

Alcohol use was created from 2 variables that measured any alcohol in the last 2 years and frequency of alcohol use 3 months before this pregnancy. A respondent who drank any alcohol in the past 2 years and who drank any alcohol during the 3 months before this pregnancy was classified as an alcohol user. A respondent who had not had any alcohol in the last 2 years and who drank in the last 2 years but did not drink alcohol during the 3 months before this pregnancy was classified as an alcohol nonuser.

Perinatal/delivery experiences

Infant birth weight

Birth weight was recorded from the birth certificate.

Infants weighing <2,500 g were coded as low-birth-weight. Infants weighing ≥2,500 g were coded as normal-weight.

Parity

Including your most recent pregnancy, how many times have you been pregnant?

Responses were dichotomized: 1) women who had no previous live births and 2) women who had any (ie, 1 or more) previous live births.

Health care coverage during pregnancy

During this pregnancy did you have any kind of health care coverage plan or insurance plan?

Women who responded yes were coded as has coverage, and women who responded no were coded as does not have coverage.

Delivery method

Please tell me which one of the following statements best describes how your new baby was delivered. Vaginally; You went into labor, but had to have a C-section; You didn’t go into labor and had to have a C-section.

Possible responses included “vaginal delivery,” “cesarean section with labor,” and “cesarean section without labor.” Responses of “cesarean section with labor” and “cesarean section without labor” were combined.

Prenatal care

How many weeks or months pregnant were you when you had your first visit for prenatal care? Don’t count a visit that was only for a pregnancy test or only for Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (known in the United States as WIC).

Responses were standardized to weeks. Women who had their first prenatal visit during their first trimester were classified as having received early prenatal care. Women who did not receive prenatal care and those that had their first visit during their second or third trimesters were classified as having received late or no prenatal care (late or none).

Pregnancy intention

Thinking back to just before you got pregnant with your new baby, how did you feel about becoming pregnant?

Responses were dichotomized into groups representing intended pregnancy (“you wanted to be pregnant sooner,” “you wanted to be pregnant then”) and unintended pregnancy (“you wanted to be pregnant later,” “you didn’t want to be pregnant then or at any time in the future”).

Abbrevations: NA, not applicable.

Return to your place in the textTable 2. Distribution of Demographic and Behavioral Variables, Brownsville-Matamoros Sister City Project, Brownsville, Texas, and Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico, August 21-November 9, 2005a
Characteristic Total Sample Matamoros Cameron County P Valueb
Unweighted No. of Respondents (n = 946) Weighted No. of Respondents (%) (n = 5,094) Unweighted No. of Respondents (n = 489) Weighted No. of Respondents (%) (n = 2,764) Unweighted No. of Respondents (n = 457) Weighted No. of Respondents (%) (n = 2,331)
Place of delivery
United States 483 2,464 (48.4) 27 139 (5.0) 456 2,325 (99.7) <.001
Mexico 463 2,630 (51.6) 462 2,624 (95.0) 1 6 (0.3)
Ethnicityc
Hispanic 883 4,772 (95.0) 489 2,765 (100.0) 394 2,009 (88.9) <.001
Non-Hispanic 49 250 (5.0) NA NA 49 250 (11.1)
Age, y
<25 456 2,464 (48.4) 248 1,403 (50.8) 208 1,062 (45.6) .10
≥25 490 2,630 (51.6) 241 1,361 (49.2) 249 1,269 (54.4)
Marital status
Not married 165 864 (17.1) 46 258 (9.4) 119 607 (26.3) <.001
Married 773 4,187 (82.9) 440 2,489 (90.6) 333 1,699 (73.7)
Education, y
<8 211 1,163 (23.0) 156 883 (32.0) 55 280 (12.1) <.001
8-12 416 2,262 (44.7) 248 1,404 (50.9) 168 858 (37.2)
>12 313 1,638 (32.3) 84 471 (17.1) 229 1,168 (50.7)
Employment status
Employed 454 2,450 (48.5) 238 1,350 (48.9) 216 1,100 (47.9) .01
Unemployed 72 380 (7.5) 24 134 (4.9) 48 246 (10.7)
Not in labor force 412 2,223 (44.0) 226 1,274 (46.2) 186 949 (41.4)
Mother’s place of birth
United States 253 1,291 (25.5) 2 11 (0.4) 195 995 (43.2) <.001
Mexico 678 3,724 (73.6) 483 2,729 (99.0) 251 1,280 (55.5)
Other/don’t know 9 47 (0.9) 3 17 (0.6) 6 30 (1.3)
Primary language
English 239 1,217 (23.9) 3 17 (0.6) 236 1,200 (51.5) <.001
Spanish 707 3,877 (76.1) 486 2,746 (99.4) 221 1,131 (48.5)
Smoking status
Smoker 60 319 (6.3) 24 135 (4.9) 36 184 (7.9) .01
Nonsmoker 883 4,759 (93.7) 464 2,622 (95.1) 419 2,137 (92.1)
Alcohol use
User 223 1,172 (23.1) 66 372 (13.5) 157 801 (65.5) <.001
Nonuser 720 3,906 (76.9) 422 2,386 (86.5) 298 1,520 (34.5)
Health care coverage during pregnancy
Has coverage 653 3,525 (69.3) 337 1,915 (69.4) 316 1,610 (69.2) .93
Does not have coverage 291 1,558 (30.7) 151 843 (30.6) 140 715 (30.8)
Delivery method
Cesarean 415 2,234 (43.9) 217 1,224 (44.4) 198 1,010 (43.3) .68
Vaginal 530 2,855 (56.1) 271 1,534 (55.6) 259 1,320 (56.7)
Infant birth weight
Low (<2,500 g) 64 341 (6.7) 24 136 (5.0) 40 205 (8.8) .01
Normal (≥2,500 g) 878 4,731 (93.3) 462 2,610 (95.0) 416 2,121 (91.2)
Parity
Any previous live births 638 3,430 (67.3) 317 1,793 (64.9) 321 1,637 (70.3) .06
No previous live births 308 1,664 (32.7) 172 971 (35.1) 136 693 (29.7)
Prenatal care
Early 496 2,647 (52.8) 217 1,224 (45.0) 279 1,423 (62.0) <.001
Late or none 435 2,366 (47.2) 264 1,494 (55.0) 171 872 (38.0)
Pregnancy intention
Intended to get pregnant 451 2,444 (48.4) 259 1,466 (53.3) 192 978 (42.5) <.001
Did not intend to get pregnant 487 2,608 (51.6) 228 1,286 (46.7) 259 1,322 (57.5)

Abbreviation: NA, not applicable.
a Columns do not all total to number in sample size because of missing data.
b χ2 test used to determine statistical differences.
c All respondents who resided in Mexico were classified as Hispanic. Therefore, ethnicity could not be included in analyses limited to Matamoros only.

Return to your place in the textTable 3. Prevalence of Attempted Breastfeeding Before Hospital Discharge, Brownsville-Matamoros Sister City Project, Brownsville, Texas, and Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico, August 21-November 9, 2005
Characteristic Matamoros Cameron County Total Sample
Weighted % (95% CI) P Value Weighted % (95% CI) P Value Weighted % (95% CI) P Value
Place of delivery 
United States 77.8 (62.2-93.4) .59 63.6 (58.9-68.4) .27  64.4 (60.0-68.9) <.001
Mexico 82.1 (79.1-82.3) 100.0 82.1 (80.0-84.3)
Ethnicitya
Hispanic 81.9 (79.7-84.1) NA 61.7 (56.0-67.4) .007  73.4 (70.8-75.9) .28
Non-Hispanic NA 79.7 (68.7-90.7) 79.7 (68.7-90.7)
Age, y
<25 83.9 (80.3-87.4) .15 62.6 (54.8-70.5) .65  74.7 (70.6-78.8) .41
≥25 79.8 (76.4-83.2) 64.7 (59.6-69.7) 72.5 (69.7-75.3)
Marital status
Not married 84.7 (76.4-92.8) .51 58.9 (50.3-67.4) .14  66.6 (60.2-73.0) .01
Married 81.9 (79.7-84.1) 65.2 (60.4-70.0) 75.1 (72.9-77.4)
Education, y
<8 85.4 (80.4-90.3) <.001 65.3 (54.6-76.0) .94 80.5 (76.0-85.1) <.001
8-12 85.5 (82.0-89.0) 63.8 (55.7-71.9) 77.3 (73.6-80.9)
>12 65.4 (56.2-74.7) 63.0 (56.8-69.2) 63.7 (58.7-68.7)
Employment status
Employed 79.0 (75.7-82.3) .06 61.2 (54.5-67.9) .31  71.0 (67.7-74.4) .10
Unemployed 91.9 (82.2- 100.0) 58.5 (44.1-72.9) 70.3 (59.7-80.9)
Not in labor force 84.2 (79.8-88.6) 67.7 (60.5-74.9) 77.2 (73.1-81.3)
Mother’s place of birth
United States 50.0 (0.0-100.0) .06 61.1 (54.9-67.3) .45  61.0 (54.8-67.2) .001
Mexico 82.1 (79.7-84.4) 66.6 (60.3-73.0) 77.9 (75.6-80.2)
Other/don’t know 100.0 67.0 (32.6-100.0) 78.8 (55.5-100.0)
Primary language
English 0 .06 60.7 (55.7-65.7) .09  59.8 (54.9-64.8) <.001
Spanish 82.4 (80.2-84.6) 67.0 (60.4-73.5) 77.9 (75.6-80.1)
Smoking status
Smoker 70.6 (54.0-87.1) .17 61.0 (45.7-76.4) .70  65.1 (54.0-76.2) .12
Nonsmoker 82.6 (80.4-84.8) 64.0 (59.4-68.7) 74.3 (72.0-76.6)
Alcohol use
User 78.9 (71.8-86.0) .35 62.5 (56.2-68.8) .60  67.7 (62.7-72.7) .005
Nonuser 82.5 (80.2-84.9) 64.5 (59.0-70.0) 75.5 (73.2-77.8)
Health care coverage during pregnancy
Has coverage 81.1 (78.5-83.6) .39 63.4 (57.9-68.9) .81 73.0 (70.2-75.8) .47
Does not have coverage 83.6 (78.7-88.5) 64.3 (57.9-70.6) 74.7 (70.9-78.5)
Delivery method
Cesarean 71.4 (68.1-74.6) <.001 59.6 (54.0-65.3) .03 66.1 (62.2-70.0) <.001
Vaginal 90.5 (85.1-95.9) 66.9 (61.0-72.8) 79.6 (76.4-82.7)
Infant birth weight
Low (<2,500 g) 54.2 (34.5-73.8) .01 30.1 (15.3-44.9) .001 39.7 (27.9-51.6) <.001
Normal (≥2,500 g) 83.2 (81.0-85.4) 67.1 (62.8-71.5) 76.0 (73.9-78.1)
Parity
Any previous live births 86.2 (83.2-89.3) .002 60.5 (55.3-65.7) .01 74.0 (71.3-76.7) .68
No previous live births 73.8 (67.7-80.0) 71.4 (63.4-79.3) 72.8 (68.0-77.5)
Prenatal care
Early 78.5 (74.1-82.9) .08 65.7 (60.7-70.6) .09 71.6 (68.3-74.9) .07
Late or none 84.4 (80.0-87.9) 60.9 (54.5-67.4) 75.8 (72.6-78.9)
Pregnancy intention
Intended to get pregnant 80.7 (77.4-84.0) .27  72.0 (67.1-76.8) .003 77.2 (74.5-79.8) .009 
Did not intend to get pregnant 83.5 (80.0-87.0) 57.6 (50.1-65.1) 70.4 (66.4-74.3)

Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; NA, not applicable.
a In Matamoros, all women were considered to be of Hispanic ethnicity. Therefore, no data are reported for non-Hispanic ethnicity, and the χ2 is not calculated.

Return to your place in the textTable 4. Odds of Attempted Breastfeeding Before Hospital Discharge, Brownsville-Matamoros Sister City Project, Brownsville, Texas, and Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico, August 21-November 9, 2005
Characteristic Matamoros Modela
AOR (95% CI)
Cameron County Modela
AOR (95% CI)
Matamoros and Cameron County Modela
AOR (95% CI)
Place of residence
United States Ref
Mexico 1.93 (1.31-2.84)
Ethnicity
Hispanic 0.42 (0.21-0.85)
Non-Hispanic Ref
Marital status
Not married 1.10 (0.79-1.55)
Married Ref
Education level, y
<8 1.94 (1.11-3.42) 1.27 (0.79-2.06)
8-12 2.91 (1.59-5.32) 1.39 (0.94-2.05)
>12 Ref Ref
Employment status
Employed Ref Ref
Unemployed 1.70 (0.42-6.89) 1.03 (0.56-1.91)
Not in labor force 1.01 (0.57-1.77) 1.29 (0.92-1.82)
Language
English Ref Ref
Spanish 1.40 (0.99-1.99) 1.35 (0.92-2.00)
Alcohol use
User 0.99 (0.73-1.36)
Nonuser Ref
Delivery method
Cesarean Ref Ref Ref
Vaginal 3.63 (1.91-6.90) 1.15 (0.83-1.60) 1.98 (1.43-2.75)
Infant birth weight
Low (<2,500 g) 0.21 (0.11-0.44) 0.22 (0.10-0.50) 0.26 (0.15-0.44)
Normal (≥2,500 g) Ref Ref Ref
Parity
Any previous live births 1.96 (1.18-3.25) 0.64 (0.40-1.03)
No previous live births Ref Ref
Prenatal care
Early 0.89 (0.49-1.63) 1.13 (0.83-1.52) 0.97 (0.74-1.29)
Late or none Ref Ref Ref
Pregnancy intention
Intended to get pregnant Ref Ref
Did not intend to get pregnant 0.50 (0.33-0.77) 0.66 (0.49-0.89)

Abbreviations: AOR, adjusted odds ratio; CI, confidence interval.
a Each column represents a separate logistic regression model and all variables included in the model. Variables that satisfy eligibility criteria for inclusion in one model may not for another model. Dashes indicate that a variable did not meet the criteria for inclusion in that model but did for 1 or more of the other models.

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The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


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