Abstract

Few studies have examined disparities in adverse birth outcomes and compared contributing socioeconomic factors specifically between African-American and White teen mothers. This study examined intersections between neighborhood socioeconomic status (as defined by census-tract median household income), maternal age, and racial disparities in preterm birth (PTB) outcomes between African-American and White teen mothers in North Carolina. Using a linked dataset with state birth record data and socioeconomic information from the 2010 US Census, disparities in preterm birth outcomes for 16,472 teen mothers were examined through bivariate and multilevel analyses. African-American teens had significantly greater odds of PTB outcomes than White teens (OR = 1.38, 95% CI 1.21, 1.56). Racial disparities in PTB rates significantly varied by neighborhood income; PTB rates were 2.1 times higher for African-American teens in higher income neighborhoods compared to White teens in similar neighborhoods. Disparities in PTB did not vary significantly between teens younger than age 17 and teens ages 17–19, although the magnitude of racial disparities was larger between younger African-American and White teens. These results justify further investigations using intersectional frameworks to test the effects of racial status, neighborhood socioeconomic factors, and maternal age on birth outcome disparities among infants born to teen mothers.

1. Introduction

Disparities in birth outcomes among mothers in different racial, age, and socioeconomic groups continue to present a critical health concern in the United States. Specifically, previous research on various US populations identified persistent disparities in adverse birth outcomes based on maternal characteristics, which include race as Black or African-American, younger maternal age (younger than 17 years old), and low socioeconomic status [1, 2]. Nationwide, African-American mothers have a greater prevalence of adverse birth outcomes than White mothers [3], and previous studies have identified these racial disparities across all maternal age groups [4, 5]. These studies also consistently have demonstrated greater prevalence of low birth weight (weight less than 2500 grams), preterm birth (birth prior to 37 weeks gestation), and neonatal mortality outcomes among infants born to teen mothers in comparison to adult mothers [58]. In addition, greater proportions of adverse birth outcomes and associated disparities were found among mothers in environments of lower socioeconomic status in comparison to mothers residing in higher socioeconomic environments [9, 10].

The continued importance of examining preterm birth (PTB) outcomes rests on the increased risk of infant mortality for preterm infants before they turn one year old. The US consistently ranks behind other industrialized countries in infant mortality rates [11], and currently PTB is one of the leading causes of infant death overall in the US [3]. Despite this critical nature of PTB, few studies have examined differences in PTB specifically between African-American and White teen mothers. Instead, studies in PTB disparities mostly focused on adult mothers. Rates of PTB are consistently higher among mothers younger than 17 compared to adult mothers [2] and higher proportions of African-American mothers of younger ages have infants compared to mothers of other races [12]. As a result, the assumption prevails that maternal age sufficiently explains racial disparities in PTB and other adverse outcomes among infants born to teen mothers. This assumption subsequently limits investigation of other factors, and few studies have specifically examined the interplay of race and socioeconomic factors in associations with adverse birth outcomes among teen mothers [13, 14].

More current studies have examined health disparities and associated factors using intersectional frameworks [1519]. As theoretical perspectives for public health, intersectional frameworks incorporate several principle tenets [20]: (1) multiple social identities intersect and are interdependent; (2) members of historically oppressed or marginalized groups are examined within their context; (3) multiple social identities at the individual level intersect with multiple level structural factors to contribute to disparities in health outcomes; and (4) social categories are considered equally important in their influence. Using intersectional frameworks can allow researchers to explore birth outcome disparities among teen mothers through examining relationships between race and socioeconomic status as “historically created relationships of differential distribution of resources, privilege, and power, of advantage and disadvantage” [21] to identify where disparities exist within disadvantaged groups of teen mothers and the context that may contribute to these disparities.

This study examined disparities in PTB between African-American and White teen mothers using an intersectional socioecological framework. To date, no studies previously examined racial disparities in birth outcomes among teen mothers using intersectional frameworks. Given the persistence of racial disparities in birth outcomes among teen mothers in the US, findings from this study can help to identify target high-risk subgroups of teen mothers for prenatal and preconception health intervention and subsequently increase positive birth outcomes in these subgroups.

2. Theoretical Framework and Research Questions

This study incorporated an intersectional framework in the context of previous socioecological perspectives [2224]. Socioecological frameworks posit that multiple circumstances at the intrapersonal, interpersonal, community, institutional, and policy levels influence health outcomes. Using this combination of perspectives can provide deeper insight into relationships between factors that contribute to health outcomes at different levels as well as the amount of variance attributed at each level under examination [25]. Through this framework, this study investigated the intersection of race as an intrapersonal construct with socioeconomic factors at the community level to affect PTB outcomes among teen mothers.

Although previous research has consistently identified PTB disparities between African-American and White teen mothers, these studies have not identified which groups within African-American teens experience more disparate outcomes. Based on the intersectionality tenets previously described, the goal of this study was to identify these subgroups through the assessment of race, socioeconomic status, and maternal age as moderators of PTB. The research team examined intersecting relationships between race and socioeconomic status in explaining disparities in birth outcomes through the first research question: does neighborhood socioeconomic status moderate racial differences in PTB of infants born to teen mothers? Given previous research that younger mothers (under 17 years old) experience greater risk of adverse birth outcomes [1, 2], the second research question involved examining intersecting relationships among race, socioeconomic status, and maternal age: does neighborhood socioeconomic status moderate racial differences in PTB differently between younger and older teen mothers? The research team proposed that African-American teen mothers’ identities based on race and maternal age uniquely intersected with socioeconomic status, and these intersections contributed to disparities in greater proportions of PTB among infants born to African-American teen mothers in comparison to White teen mothers.

3. Methods

3.1. Data Sources

This cross sectional study analyzed birth record data from the North Carolina State Center of Health Statistics (NCSCHS) for the years 2010-2011. The NCSCHS approved the use of these data for this study, and the authors’ institutional review board provided exemption for this study because no interaction occurred with human participants during this secondary data analysis. Hospitals and other birth centers across the state collected these data based on 2003 US birth certificate standards which ensure accuracy in data reporting [26]. Mothers’ street addresses were geocoded to census-tract identification numbers using ArcGIS 10.0 (Redlands, CA: Environmental Systems Research Institute) and the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council geocoder. Geocoded cases were subsequently linked by the census-tract identification numbers to statistics from the 2007–2011 American Community Survey and the 2010 US Census.

3.2. Study Sample

Figure 1 illustrates the sample selection process for this study. Approximately 243,000 mothers gave birth in 2010-2011 in the state [12, 27, 28], and 23,383 infants were born to teen mothers (~10% of all births). Notably, the percentage of all births to teen mothers was higher among African-American mothers (14.0%) compared to White mothers (5.7%). This study included teen mothers who had the following characteristics: racial and ethnic status as non-Hispanic African-American or White, United States birthplace, maternal age 19 years and under at the date of their infants’ birth, North Carolina residency, and live birth delivery of singleton infants at gestational ages of 20 weeks or more. Hispanic and foreign-born mothers were excluded because the socioeconomic considerations of ethnicity might confound the comparison of racial groups. Mothers of other races were also excluded because the proportion of teen mothers in these groups was too small for meaningful comparisons (less than 3% each). Analyses also excluded 1,298 mothers with nongeocodable addresses, which resulted in the final study sample of 16,472 teen mothers (~93% of all eligible mothers). Descriptive analyses indicated that cases that could not be geocoded did not significantly differ from the study sample in maternal characteristics or birth outcomes.

The mothers included in this sample resided in 1,991 out of 2,183 land-based census-tracts across North Carolina (91.2% of all land-based census tracts). Given the small amounts of teen mothers per census-tract (–30 mothers in each tract), census-tracts were used to operationalize neighborhood units for this study instead of census-blocks. These teens lived in census-tracts with a diverse range of racial concentration of African-American residents (95% CI = 1.2, 81.3). Approximately 41% of these teens lived in census-tracts where African-Americans comprise between 25%–75% of total residents. Thus, a substantial proportion of these teens resided in census-tracts where the African-American racial composition exceeded the state and national average of African-American residents (21.5% and 12.6% resp.) [29].

3.3. Study Measures

This study examined PTB as the dependent birth outcome variable and race and maternal age as the individual-level independent variables. PTB was defined as births that occurred prior to 37 weeks gestation per previous obstetric guidelines [2]. Analyses included race as a dichotomous variable (African-American versus White). Consistent with past literature that examined birth outcomes between age groups of teen mothers [2, 6, 7], maternal age was coded as a dichotomous variable (younger than 17 years old versus 17–19 years old).

Income is the most frequently used socioeconomic variable in past research [16, 17] because of the influence of income on access to health services (i.e., prenatal care) and general resources. Consistent with past studies [30], neighborhood socioeconomic status was operationalized as census-tract median household income from the US Census. Following prior research guidelines for teen samples [31] and previous research that has examined socioeconomic associations with birth outcome disparities between adult mothers [32], teens in the lowest income quartile comprised the “low” income group, teens in the middle 50% quartiles comprised the “middle” income group and teens in the highest income quartile comprised the “high” median income group. The high income group represented the referent category for all analyses because the research team assumed that teens in the high income group would have more opportunity for resources and subsequently have better health status, prenatal behaviors, and birth outcomes.

3.4. Analysis Plan

Descriptive and bivariate analyses included chi-square tests and independent sample -tests to test for differences in income levels and maternal age. Chi-square tests were also completed to test for differences in PTB rates across race, maternal age, and income levels. SPSS v.21 [33] was used to compute all descriptive and bivariate analyses.

Past research generally applied intersectional theoretical approaches by examining interactions between variables [16, 19, 25, 34, 35]. This study replicated previous intersectional research with the use of two-way and three-way interactions to test whether neighborhood socioeconomic status significantly moderated relationships between racial status and birth outcomes and relationships between maternal age and birth outcomes. Significant interactions were probed through omnibus interaction tests and examination of 95% confidence intervals [3638].

Multilevel models [39] identified cross-level interactions between variables at the individual level (race, maternal age) and variables at the neighborhood level (income). Despite the usefulness of multilevel models, few studies incorporate these analyses to examine health disparities between racial and ethnic groups [40, 41]. By examining cross-level interactions, multilevel analyses treat individual characteristics and neighborhood characteristics at their appropriate ecological levels to identify relationships among these characteristics. All multilevel models were computed through the use of HLM 7.01 [42].

Binomial hierarchical generalized linear models were computed to examine associations with PTB. The models assess the PTB odds as a function of race and maternal age as individual-level covariates and income as the neighborhood-level covariate. Models 1–3 separately assessed race, median household income level, and maternal age to identify significant differences in PTB relative to these characteristics. An additive model (Model 4) tested the independent contributions of race, income, and maternal age. Next, two-way interaction models (Models 5–7) tested the individual-level interaction between race and maternal age and the cross-level interactions between race and income and maternal age and income. The final three-way interaction Model 8 tested the cross-level interactions between race, maternal age, and income. Specifications for the final model are provided in the following equations [39]:

Chi-square likelihood ratio tests [43] assessed model fit when comparing the interaction models with the one-independent-variable models in accordance with the hypothesis that the interactions between race, income, and maternal age contributed to PTB disparities in this sample beyond the contribution of any singular independent variable. Two-sided values < 0.05 determined significance for all analyses.

4. Results

As presented in Table 1, bivariate analyses indicated significant differences in neighborhood income and maternal age between the two racial groups. More African-American teens resided in low income environments than White teens, whereas greater proportions of White teens resided in middle and high income environments (, ). African-American teens were also significantly younger than White teens at the time of childbirth (, ).

The chi-square tests presented in Table 2 indicated differences in PTB based on the intersections among race, income and maternal age. Similar to previous studies, infants born to African-American teens had a significantly greater proportion of PTB than infants born to White teens (, ). For the overall sample (not shown), no significant differences in PTB rates were found between younger and older teen mothers or between mothers in the three income groups. Tests within each age group indicated racial disparities for both younger teen mothers (, ) and older teen mothers (, ). By contrast, tests within each income group indicated significant racial disparities only between African-American and White teens in the high income group (, ); no statistically significant racial disparities in PTB were found among mothers in the other two income groups. Notably, the observed proportion of PTB for African-American teens in high income neighborhoods was higher than both African-American teens in lower and middle income groups and for White teen moms in all income groups. Tests within each age and income group indicated that racial disparities for mothers in high income neighborhoods persisted for both younger and older teen mothers, with a higher observed racial disparity in PTB rates for mothers younger than age 17 compared to mothers ages 17–19.

Table 3 presents the results for the multilevel models which are consistent with the chi-square results. Among the three variables, only race had significant differences in odds of PTB when assessed alone. In Model 1, African-American teens had significantly greater odds of PTB outcomes than White teens (OR = 1.38, 95% CI 1.21, 1.56). In contrast, no significant differences in PTB were identified with respect to median household income (Model 2) or maternal age (Model 3). The additive model (Model 4) indicated that racial differences remained significant and unchanged when controlling for income and age, whereas no significant main effects were found with income or age in this model.

Table 4 presents results from the interaction multilevel Models 5–8. To facilitate interpretation of the results of the interaction terms in these models, separate models stratified by income and age were run. In Model 5, neighborhood median household income moderated the relationship between race and odds of PTB as indicated by the significant two-way race × median household income interactions. These significant interactions indicated that racial disparities in PTB were significantly smaller in both low and middle income neighborhoods, compared to racial disparities in higher income neighborhoods. According to these income-stratified results, African-American teens in high income neighborhoods (OR = 2.11, 95% CI 1.61, 2.76) and middle income neighborhoods (OR = 1.25, 95% CI 1.01, 1.54) had significantly greater odds of PTB than White teens in similar neighborhoods. African-American teens in low-income neighborhoods did not have significantly greater odds of PTB than their White counterparts (OR = 1.03, 95% CI 0.74, 1.43).

In Models 6–8, racial and neighborhood income differences in odds of PTB did not significantly vary by maternal age group, as indicated by the nonsignificant interactions that include maternal age. The two-way race × maternal age interaction was marginally nonsignificant (Model 6). Age-stratified analyses indicated that older African-American teens had significantly higher odds of PTB compared to older White teens (OR = 1.33, 95% CI 1.15, 1.55). Younger African-American teens did not have significantly higher odds of PTB than older White teens (OR = 1.35, 95% CI 0.86, 2.15). The nonsignificant two-way maternal age × income interactions (Model 7) indicate that age differences in odds of PTB do not significantly vary by income level. Income-stratified analyses confirmed the lack of significant differences between younger and older teens across all income groups. When all interaction terms were included together (Model 8), the race × income interactions remained significant and unchanged. No other significant two-way or three-way interactions with maternal age were present for the interaction Model 8.

In sum, racial disparities in PTB persisted in the context of maternal age and neighborhood income level with the greatest disparities found between African-American and White teens in living in the highest income neighborhoods. Neighborhood income significantly moderated racial differences in the odds of PTB, although neighborhood income did not have significant relationships with PTB odds when assessed alone nor with maternal age. Therefore, neighborhood income was associated with significant differences in PTB outcomes only in the context of race. Racial disparities were also present regardless of the mothers’ age group, and the moderating effects of neighborhood income on racial disparities in PTB odds did not vary by maternal age group.

5. Discussion

Consistent with past literature that has found racial disparities in birth outcomes among teen mothers [13, 14], rates of PTB were higher for African-American teen mothers living in North Carolina compared to White teen mothers. More importantly, the modifying relationships of neighborhood income suggested that race intersects with socioeconomic status to affect PTB outcomes. Although the general pattern of results suggested that African-American teen mothers had the highest rates of PTB across all income groups, rates of PTB were approximately 2.1 times higher for African-American teen mothers in high income neighborhoods compared to White teen mothers in similar neighborhoods. Thus, the greatest disparities were found between African-American and White teen mothers in high income neighborhoods. Notably, the magnitude of these results were on the lower end of disparities often found among adult mothers; rates of poor birth outcomes are often 2 to 3 times higher among African-American adult women than among White adult women [4, 32, 44]. The larger disparities among adult mothers could stem from the cumulative exposure that African-American adult mothers would have to life circumstances in a “weathering” life course process [44]. Alternatively, the smaller racial disparity could stem from all teens being at increased risk of PTB compared to adults, leaving race to play a smaller (albeit still notable) role among teens.

Our findings are also consistent with previous studies that focused on adult mothers. In the current study, African-American teens in the highest income neighborhoods had the highest observed proportions of PTB among all teens in the sample, including White teens in the lowest income neighborhoods. This finding parallels previous study results in which African-American women with more education and higher income had worse health outcomes and higher rates of infant mortality than White women of lower socioeconomic status [16, 17, 32]. Future studies should explore whether other community factors, such as racial concentration of neighborhoods, may explain this phenomenon. For example, neighborhoods of higher socioeconomic status often have greater access to resources but lower proportions of African-American residents. As a result, African-American teen mothers may experience less social support, higher levels of stigmatization, and consequently greater levels of stress in these neighborhoods as hypothesized for adult African-American mothers [45]. Consistent with this possibility, previous research found a positive correlation between census-tract proportions of African-American residents and infant birth weight among African-American teen mothers [13]. Future studies should therefore explore the intersections between race and socioeconomic status by assessing racial concentration and other community-level factors.

The findings from our study differ from previous studies with teen mothers in several ways. Our finding that the PTB disparity between African-American and White teens was statistically significant in the highest and middle income neighborhoods differs from Partington et al. [14], who found that racial disparities in PTB among teen mothers became nonsignificant after controlling for income. Comparing the two studies suggests that racial disparities in birth outcomes could differ by geographic location. Differences with this previous study could stem from our use of a Southeastern statewide sample in contrast to their focus on a single Midwestern city. Differences in the proportion of African-Americans in North Carolina (21.5% for the state versus 12.6% for the US) coupled with socioeconomic differences could have contributed to a teen mother sample of greater or lesser diversity than research samples from other regions of the country. Further exploration of birth outcome disparities therefore need to be considered according to the geographic characteristics for each study sample.

Contrary to other previous study results [5, 6], no significant differences were found in PTB between younger and older teens for the overall sample. In addition, racial disparities persisted regardless of age group. The finding in the bivariate analyses of the highest disparities in PTB rates between high income African-American and White teens younger than age 17 is noteworthy. Nevertheless, the racial differences in PTB odds remained significant in the multilevel analyses in context of maternal age, and racial and socioeconomic differences in PTB did not vary significantly by maternal age. Differences between study findings could stem from this study’s categorization of maternal age groups. Although the age cutoff was based on Institute of Medicine reports that identified mothers younger than 17 as having higher rates of adverse birth outcomes [1, 2], other studies have found younger teen mothers (those younger than 15) may have even higher rates of adverse outcomes than teen mothers age 15 and older [5, 46]. Taking all results in consideration from this study, African-American teen mothers are more likely than White teen moms to experience PTB regardless of their age group. Our findings suggest that younger maternal age does not sufficiently explain racial disparities among teen mothers whereas socioeconomic circumstances may be more important to consider in examining these racial disparities. Few studies explored birth outcome disparities between age groups of teen mothers in context of socioeconomic factors [8]; therefore, future studies should further examine racial disparities in PTB outcomes between age groups in other study samples.

Future studies should also explore other psychological and social factors that may explain racial disparities in PTB, such as disparities in maternal stress, interpersonal factors, and social context. For example, maternal stress is related to birth outcomes [47], and African-American mothers may experience different types of stress during pregnancy compared to other mothers [48]. Maternal stressors for African-American teen mothers may include sexual coercion and intimate partner violence; these stressors are higher among African-American teen females compared to the national average for teens [49, 50]. African-American teens of higher socioeconomic status also might gain a lower mental health benefit from their socioeconomic level than their White peers [51], which could also contribute to higher stress levels. In addition, differences in social support during pregnancy, particularly support from infants’ fathers [52], may explain the racial disparities in birth outcomes. Overall, investigating associations between disparities in these individual, interpersonal, and social factors and disparities in birth outcomes could identify points of intervention, such as providing tailored community support in these areas for African-American teen mothers during pregnancy.

Given the findings from this study, future prenatal and preconception health interventions may need to expand outreach in prenatal education and support to include more African-American teens of higher socioeconomic status. For example, these mothers may benefit from the use of alternate prenatal care models and community pregnancy support programs that have successfully improved birth outcomes for young African-American mothers of lower socioeconomic environments [5356]. From a life course perspective, the current findings could also indicate that African-American teens of all socioeconomic levels should be considered high-risk for preconception health interventions. Because of the predominant intervention focus on economically disadvantaged mothers, limited research is available on benefits for African-American mothers from higher socioeconomic environments from these interventions. Further research is therefore needed on assessing the reach and effectiveness of current prenatal and preconception interventions for higher income African-American teen mothers.

This study had several limitations. First, only one demographic self-reported variable was used to assess racial identity. Quantitative interactions that include maternal race as a demographic variable to explore intersections generally provide limited understanding at the descriptive level of how racial disparities in health outcomes occur [57]. Warner [58] cautioned against the use of “master categories” (i.e., race) that might lead to stereotypical interpretations of results. Future studies could directly assess race-related maternal stressors, such as racial discrimination and inequity, which could explain racial disparities in birth outcomes among teen mothers. In particular, teens who experience multiple forms of racial discrimination may be at the greatest risk of poor health outcomes [59].

Second, limited information was available on several potential factors related to birth outcomes. Because of limited data available for all mothers in the 2010-11 cohorts, the authors did not control for other factors associated with preterm birth such as other demographics, medical risks, and prenatal behaviors. Notably, separate analyses for another sample of North Carolina teen mothers found that racial disparities in birth outcomes remained significant and did not decrease when accounting for these factors [60]. To build on the findings from this study, future studies should explore whether the intersectional relationships between race and income remain when controlling for these factors.

Third, information was not available about the length of time that mothers lived at their current address. Previous research noted detrimental effects of long-term poverty on birth outcomes for African-American adult mothers that grew up in deprived neighborhoods [9, 61]; therefore, future studies could explore whether residential tenure in deprived neighborhood environments for teen mothers. Future studies should also examine if intersectional relationships between maternal race and income continue or change over time in cohorts of teen mothers as these disparities could change based on changes in teen pregnancy over time. Although births to teen mothers have decreased overall in the US [12, 28], births among White teen mothers decreased at a sharper rate than births among African-American teen mothers. As a result, the possibility exists that disparities identified in this study could change over time. As another future direction in research, studies can build on previous studies on adult mothers’ pregnancy outcomes [62, 63] that examined population time trends in how social and economic factors are associated with preterm birth outcomes among teen mothers.

Finally, this study only used neighborhood income to operationalize socioeconomic status because household income information was not available from birth records. As a result, the impact of discrepancies between teens’ household income and neighborhood median income could not be evaluated. African-American teen mothers who live in households with lower incomes than their neighborhood peers may have a higher risk of adverse outcomes because their families may lack the necessary financial resources, and their high income neighborhoods (with a lower ratio of African-American families) may provide little social support. Another consideration in using census income data stems from socioeconomic differences between North Carolina and other states. North Carolina’s median household income was lower than the national average during 2010-2011 ($46,291 versus $52,762) [29], and this difference could indicate that teens in this sample could have circumstances of more economic distress than other areas in the country. Despite these considerations, using census income data to operationalize socioeconomic status allowed this study to build on previous research that found significant associations between neighborhood context and health outcomes [47, 64, 65].

Overall, this study contributes to the limited examinations of neighborhood factors related to PTB disparities among teen mothers. This study also exemplifies an intersectional approach for examining health outcomes among a statewide sample of teen mothers using vital records data for future studies. Intersectional approaches could enhance efforts to ameliorate racial disparities in PTB for teen populations. Continued exploration of disparities can provide critical information for development of interventions that can reduce disparities [66], and the findings from the current study justify further exploration of these disparities for the benefits of improvement of perinatal services and preconception health programs, improving birth outcomes, and reducing disparities among teen mothers.

Conflict of Interests

The authors declare that there is no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this paper.

Acknowledgment

The project described was supported, in part, by Award no. T32HD049302 from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development or the National Institutes of Health.