AI Article Synopsis

  • This study examines the factors influencing the use of folic acid supplements among women of reproductive age in the U.S., highlighting that compliance with recommendations is not ideal.
  • Key factors linked to supplement use include race/ethnicity, education level, age at delivery, employment status, income, and smoking habits, with lower compliance noted among non-white women with less education.
  • The findings suggest that targeted public health campaigns should consider these demographic characteristics to effectively increase folic acid supplementation among women planning for pregnancy.

Article Abstract

Background: Despite public health campaigns encouraging women to take a daily folic acid supplement, the proportion of reproductive age women, in the United States, who comply with this recommendation is less than optimal. The objective of this analysis was to identify predictors of preconceptional folic acid-containing supplement use to define subgroups of women who may benefit from targeted folic acid campaigns.

Methods: This study included 6570 mothers of live born infants from the control population of National Birth Defects Prevention Study (1997-2005). Logistic regression analyses were used to identify predictors of preconceptional folic acid supplementation. A classification and regression tree (CART) analysis was used to define subgroups of women with different patterns of preconceptional folic acid supplementation.

Results: Race/ethnicity, education, age at delivery, nativity, employment, income, number of dependents, smoking, and birth control use were significantly associated with preconceptional folic acid-containing supplement use. Based on a CART analysis, education, race/ethnicity, and age were the most distinguishing factors between women with different preconceptional supplementation patterns. Non-white women with <4 years of a college education were the least likely to use folic acid-containing supplements (11%). However, even in the most compliant subgroup (women with ≥4 years of college), only 60% of women supplemented with folic acid.

Conclusion: These results demonstrate the need for continued efforts to increase folic acid supplementation among all reproductive aged women. However, the success of such efforts may be improved if maternal characteristics such as education, race/ethnicity, and age, are considered in the development of future interventions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bdra.23238DOI Listing

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