Low birth weight as an indicator
of child health in Greenland-use, knowledge and implications
Niclasen B
ABSTRACT [full
text] [back
to issue 66(3)]
Objectives. The aim of this study was to analyse if low birthweight
is a valuable indicator of child health in Greenland.
Study design. A case study focusing on low birthweight
as an indicator in Greenland with 3 units and 5 subunits of analyses.
Methods. Literature reviews, interviews with health care professionals
and an analysis of the National Birth Register.
Results. Low birthweight was a well-known and yearly surveyed
indicator, but not used by clinicians or by policymakers. Research was
sparse, but the major risk factor observed was smoking. The rate of
low birthweight in 19972005 was on average 5.0%. Of the low birthweight
cases, 67.0% infants were born prematurely but only 44.8% of these births
had a low birthweight. The known risk factors for a low birthweight
in Greenland included abnormal delivery, low Apgar score at 5 minutes,
female gender, multiple birth, being a single mother and less than complete
prenatal care by a midwife. For preterm birth, associations were found
with a not normal delivery, perinatal mortality, low Apgar score at
5 minutes, multiple birth, single mothers, mothers born in Greenland,
young mothers, mothers living in a village and in nulliparae.
Conclusions. Low birthweight is as valuable an indicator of child
health at the national level in Greenland as it is in other developed
countries. If interventions are to be aimed at known, quantitatively
important, modifiable determinants of low birthweight, the results suggest
that cigarette smoking and antenatal care are the most important to
address.
(Int J Circumpolar Health 2007; 66(3):215-225).
Keywords: low birthweight, child health, indicator, Greenland,
smoking, antenatal care