PTI New Delhi, May 27 A new research has linked an increase in premature births during hot weather conditions to intense and prolonged heatwaves. A team of researchers, including those at University of Nevada, estimated changes in the rate of preterm and early-term birth in response to heatwaves. A heatwave is a period of extremely high temperatures relative to what is normally expected over a region.
The researchers analysed 5.3 crore births across the 50 largest metropolitan areas in the US over a 25-year period (1993-2017) in terms of daily counts of preterm and early-term births. While a full-term pregnancy lasts for about 40 weeks, babies born before 37 weeks are preterm births and those delivered between 37 and 39 weeks of the pregnancy are early-term births.
The researchers found that over the 25-year period, preterm births increased by 2 per cent, while early-term births increased by 1 per cent, following a four consecutive day-period during which each day’s average temperature was among the hottest 2.5 per cent for that region. “Each 1-degree Celsius increase in mean temperature above the threshold was associated with a 1 per cent increase in the rate of both preterm and early-term birth,” the authors wrote in the study published in The Journal of American Medical Association (JAMA) Network Open.
The research also found that for the same exposure to heatwaves, preterm and early-term births increased by more numbers in women younger than 30 years of age, having .
