Impact Of Cash Transfers On The Association Between Prenatal Exposures To High Temperatures And Low Birthweight: Retrospective Analysis From The LEAP 1000 Study
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An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Abstract
Objective: To explore the associations between prenatal temperature exposures and
low birthweight (LBW) and modification by cash transfer (CT) receipt.
Design: a retrospective cohort study.
Setting: Five rural districts in northern Ghana.
Population or sample: A total of 3016 infants born to women interviewed as part of
of the Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty (LEAP 1000) impact evaluation
between 2015 and 2017.
Methods: Birthweight was collected using household surveys administered to LEAP
1000 eligible women. We used a UNICEF-developed multiple-imputation approach
to address the missing birthweight and applied an empirical heaping correction
to the multiply imputed birthweight data. Survey data were linked to the European
Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Reanalysis 5-hourly temperature averaged to weeks for 2011–2017 using community centroids. Using distributed-lag
nonlinear models, we explored the lag-specific associations between weekly average
temperatures greater than 30°C and LBW, and stratified by LEAP 1000 treatment.
Main outcome measures: low birthweight (<2.5 kg).
Results: Twelve percent (n = 365) of infants were LBW; the mean ± SD birthweight
was 3.02 ± 0.37 kg. Overall, increasing temperatures were associated with increased
odds of LBW, with the greatest odds observed in the 3weeks before birth (odds ratio)
1.005–1.025). These positive associations were even larger among comparison infants
and null among treatment infants.
Conclusions: Our study found increased odds of LBW with high weekly average
temperatures throughout pregnancy and the preconception period and demonstrate
mitigated effects of the LEAP 1000 CT program. More evidence on the potential
of CTs to serve as adaptation interventions in low- and middle-income countries
needed to protect pregnant women and their infants from the impacts of climate change.
change.
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Research Article