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Dive into the research topics where Jaime C. Slaughter-Acey is active.

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Womens Health Issues | 2013

The Influence of Personal and Group Racism on Entry Into Prenatal Care Among-African American Women

Jaime C. Slaughter-Acey; Cleopatra Howard Caldwell; Dawn P. Misra

BACKGROUND Racism has been hypothesized as a barrier to accessing health care. No quantitative study has directly assessed its influence on womens initiation of prenatal care (PNC). We examined the relationship between PNC entry and experiences of personal and group racism among low-income, African-American (AA) women. We also examined whether the use of denial of racism as a coping mechanism was associated with a delay in accessing PNC. METHODS Using a prospective/retrospective cohort design we collected data from 872 AA women (prenatally, n = 484; postpartum, n = 388). Multinomial logistic regression was used to assess the relationship between the overall denial of racism index and PNC initiation. FINDINGS PNC entry was not associated with personal experiences of racism (p = .33); it was significantly associated with group experiences (p < .01). CONCLUSION Denial of racism experienced by other AAs was a barrier to early PNC among low-income, AA women. Delayed access to PNC may be rooted in the avoidance of racialized experiences among less empowered women when faced with discrimination. Our findings have important implication for the engagement of AA women into the PNC delivery system and the health care system postpartum.


Annals of Epidemiology | 2016

Racism in the form of micro aggressions and the risk of preterm birth among black women

Jaime C. Slaughter-Acey; Shawnita Sealy-Jefferson; Laura Helmkamp; Cleopatra Howard Caldwell; Theresa L. Osypuk; Robert W. Platt; Jennifer K. Straughen; Rhonda K. Dailey-Okezie; Purni Abeysekara; Dawn P. Misra

PURPOSE This study sought to examine whether perceived interpersonal racism in the form of racial micro aggressions was associated with preterm birth (PTB) and whether the presence of depressive symptoms and perceived stress modified the association. METHODS Data stem from a cohort of 1410 black women residing in Metropolitan Detroit, Michigan, enrolled into the Life-course Influences on Fetal Environments (LIFE) study. The Daily Life Experiences of Racism and Bother (DLE-B) scale measured the frequency and perceived stressfulness of racial micro aggressions experienced during the past year. Severe past-week depressive symptomatology was measured by the Centers for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression scale (CES-D) dichotomized at ≥ 23. Restricted cubic splines were used to model nonlinearity between perceived racism and PTB. We used the Perceived Stress Scale to assess general stress perceptions. RESULTS Stratified spline regression analysis demonstrated that among those with severe depressive symptoms, perceived racism was not associated with PTB. However, perceived racism was significantly associated with PTB among women with mild to moderate (CES-D score ≤ 22) depressive symptoms. Perceived racism was not associated with PTB among women with or without high amounts of perceived stress. CONCLUSIONS Our findings suggest that racism, at least in the form of racial micro aggressions, may not further impact a group already at high risk for PTB (those with severe depressive symptoms), but may increase the risk of PTB for women at lower baseline risk.


Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition | 2016

Characteristics of Hospitalized Children With a Diagnosis of Malnutrition United States, 2010

Ruba A. Abdelhadi; Sandra Bouma; Sigrid Bairdain; Jodi Wolff; Amanda Legro; Steve Plogsted; Peggi Guenter; Helaine E. Resnick; Jaime C. Slaughter-Acey; Mark R. Corkins

INTRODUCTION Malnutrition is common in hospitalized patients in the United States. In 2010, 80,710 of 6,280,710 hospitalized children <17 years old had a coded diagnosis of malnutrition (CDM). This report summarizes nationally representative, person-level characteristics of hospitalized children with a CDM. METHODS Data are from the 2010 Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project, which contains patient-level data on hospital inpatient stays. When weighted appropriately, estimates from the project represent all U.S. hospitalizations. The data set contains up to 25 ICD-9-CM diagnostic codes for each patient. Children with a CDM listed during hospitalization were identified. RESULTS In 2010, 1.3% of hospitalized patients <17 years had a CDM. Since the data include only those with a CDM, malnutritions true prevalence may be underrepresented. Length of stay among children with a CDM was almost 2.5 times longer than those without a CDM. Hospital costs for children with a CDM were >3 times higher than those without a CDM. Hospitalized children with a CDM were less likely to have routine discharge and almost 3.5 times more likely to require postdischarge home care. Children with a CDM were more likely to have multiple comorbidities. CONCLUSIONS Hospitalized children with a CDM are associated with more comorbidities, longer hospital stay, and higher healthcare costs than those without this diagnosis. These undernourished children may utilize more healthcare resources in the hospital and community. Clinicians and policymakers should factor this into healthcare resource utilization planning. Recognizing and accurately coding malnutrition in hospitalized children may reveal the true prevalence of malnutrition.


Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology | 2013

Allostatic load and health: Can perinatal epidemiology lead the way forward?

Dawn P. Misra; Jennifer K. Straughen; Jaime C. Slaughter-Acey

In this issue of the Journal, Wallace and colleagues add to the small but growing literature endeavouring to understand both how allostatic load can be defined in pregnancy and how it may play a role in the aetiology of adverse birth outcomes. As articulated by Sterling and Eyer, ‘. . . allostasis defines health as a state of responsiveness and optimal predictive fluctuation to adapt to the demands of the environment’. Allostasis implies a dynamic system in which multiple factors are interconnected, and there is a balancing act as the system responds to change. Extending from this is the concept of allostatic load, described by McEwen and Stellar as representing ‘the “wear and tear” the body experiences when repeated allostatic responses are activated during stressful situations’. Wallace and colleagues capitalised on preconceptional allostatic load indicators available from the Bogalusa Heart Study matched to birth certificates. No associations were found between allostatic load and preterm or small for gestational age births, with no apparent effect modification by race or education. The concept of allostatic load aligns with the thinking of many perinatal researchers, particularly the evolution of research on psychosocial stressors. Early work on stress and preterm delivery focused on acute stressors, measured, for example, as counts of life events occurring during pregnancy. The inadequacy of this approach was soon realised, and investigators began to develop and implement measures of chronic stressors. Subsequently, chronic stressors were recognised as particularly salient for poor and minority women who suffered the highest rates of adverse birth outcomes. The field continued to advance and began incorporating a more explicit consideration of the response to stressors as distinct from exposure to stressors. Later work by both Lu and Misra incorporated psychosocial as well as other types of stressors within life course frameworks that explicitly separate stressors/exposures from responses to the stressors/exposures. These models also identified the need to consider mediation pathways. The life course frameworks also identified acute and chronic stressors related to racism. As others in the field have embraced these frameworks, the challenge of how to measure life course stressors and their impacts (e.g. stress and allostatic load) has become integral in efforts to advance this field forward. In our own work, we have begun to measure socio-economic environment and body weight across the life course in an effort to characterise levels and trajectories of these ‘stressors’ and relate them to birth outcomes. Psychologists have utilised this concept of allostatic load to try to understand how stressors, particularly chronic stressors, impact health (see http://www .macses.ucsf.edu/research/allostatic/allostatic.php). Most work has focused on health in later adulthood, particularly cardiovascular and metabolic disease and aging. Allostatic load has been represented as an unweighted composite index of identified biomarkers in which a point is contributed if the individual is above a certain threshold (e.g. above the 75th percentile). There are a number of problems with this approach generally as well as with respect to perinatal research. First, not all studies use the same biomarkers, and the issue of repeated measures and longitudinal patterns are not sufficiently addressed. Such issues are very relevant in perinatal research. Wallace et al. astutely focus on preconceptional biomarkers as variation outside of non-pregnant norms in the pregnancy levels is well established in even healthy pregnancies. However, there is no clear justification as to when factors should be measured: a single time point 3 months prior to conception? Year before conception? Beginning in childhood every five years? If longitudinal data are available, is the pattern important or the level? Second, while much has been written about the way in which multiple mediators of adaptation are interconnected in a non-linear network with non-linear effects on organ systems, little has Correspondence: Dawn P. Misra, Department of Family Medicine and Public Health Sciences, Wayne State University School of Medicine, 3939 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, MI 48170, USA. E-mail: [email protected] bs_bs_banner


American Journal of Preventive Medicine | 2016

Life-course Social Mobility and Reduced Risk of Adverse Birth Outcomes

Theresa L. Osypuk; Jaime C. Slaughter-Acey; Rebecca Kehm; Dawn P. Misra

INTRODUCTION Higher adult socioeconomic position (SEP) is associated with better birth outcomes. However, few studies incorporate life-course or intergenerational SEP, which may inform etiology and targeted prevention efforts. This study tested whether life-course social mobility from childhood was associated with lower risk of adverse birth outcomes. METHODS Data were from the Life-course Influences of Fetal Environments (LIFE) retrospective cohort study among black women, 2009-2011, in metropolitan Detroit, MI. This study (analyzed in 2014-2016) examined whether social mobility was associated with two primary birth outcomes: small for gestational age (SGA) and preterm birth (PTB). Childhood and adulthood SEP were measured by survey in adulthood, for two constructs, measured ordinally: educational attainment and perceived financial sufficiency (subjective income/wealth). Social mobility was calculated as the difference of adulthood minus childhood SEP. RESULTS In covariate-adjusted Poisson regression models, 1-SD improved educational social mobility from childhood to adulthood was protective for SGA (adjusted risk ratio=0.76; 95% CI=0.64, 0.91); this association remained after adjusting for financial mobility. Upward financial social mobility from early childhood was marginally protective for SGA (adjusted risk ratio=0.85; 95% CI=0.72, 1.02), but became nonsignificant after controlling educational mobility. There were no overall associations of social mobility with PTB or low birth weight, although sensitivity analyses identified that improved financial mobility was associated with 16% marginally lower risk of spontaneous PTB and 28% marginally lower risk of low birth weight among upwardly mobile/stable women only. CONCLUSIONS Improved life-course social mobility is associated with reduced risk for SGA and spontaneous PTB among black women.


SSM-Population Health | 2016

Neighborhood disadvantage and preterm delivery in Urban African Americans: The moderating role of religious coping

Shawnita Sealy-Jefferson; Jaime C. Slaughter-Acey; Cleopatra Howard Caldwell; Jamila L. Kwarteng; Dawn P. Misra

Evidence suggests that neighborhood disadvantage predicts preterm delivery (PTD). However, the design of most existing studies precludes within-group analyses, which would allow the identification segments of the population at highest risk, as well as preventive factors. African Americans (AA) are disproportionately affected by PTD, are disproportionately concentrated in disadvantaged neighborhoods, and frequently use religious coping in response to chronic stressors. Our objective was to examine the association between neighborhood disadvantage and PTD, and whether religious coping moderated the associations, among postpartum AA women. Addresses from participants of the Life Influences on Fetal Environments Study (n=1387) were geocoded and linked to data from the American Community Survey. An index of neighborhood disadvantage was derived from a principal components analysis of the following variables: % below poverty, % unemployed, % receiving public assistance income, % college educated, % AA, % female-headed households, % owner occupied homes, median income, and median home value. Three domains of religious coping were assessed: organizational (church attendance), non-organizational (praying for self and asking others for prayer), and personal or subjective (experiences, perceptions, and sentiments about religion), and all were dichotomized as frequent/infrequent or satisfied/not satisfied. Preterm delivery was defined as birth before 37 completed weeks of gestation. Prevalence ratios and 95% confidence intervals were estimated with log binomial regression models. Neighborhood disadvantage did not predict PTD rates in the overall sample. However, there was evidence of moderation by asking others for prayer (P for asking for prayer X disadvantage index interaction term: 0.01). Among women who infrequently asked others for prayer, neighborhood disadvantage was positively associated with PTD rates (adjusted Prevalence ratio: 1.28, 95% Confidence Interval: 1.01, 1.63), and a null association was found for those who frequently asked others for prayer. No evidence of moderation by the other religious coping variables was present. Non-organizational religious coping may buffer against the adverse effects of neighborhood disadvantage on PTD rates, among urban AA women. Future research should examine the mechanisms of the reported relationships.


aimsph 2018, Vol. 5, Pages 89-98 | 2018

Can support from the father of the baby buffer the adverse effects of depressive symptoms on risk of preterm birth in Black families

Carmen Giurgescu; Lara Fahmy; Jaime C. Slaughter-Acey; Alexandra Nowak; Cleopatra Howard Caldwell; Dawn P. Misra

Background While maternal depressive symptoms during pregnancy have been linked to preterm birth (PTB; birth before 37 completed weeks of gestation), little has been reported on potential buffering factors, particularly specific to Black women who are at much higher risk. We examined the association between depressive symptoms and PTB in pregnant Black women, with father of the baby (FOB) support as a potential buffering factor. Methods Data were obtained from the life-course influences on fetal environments study (2009–2011), a cohort of 1,410 Black women in metropolitan Detroit, Michigan (71% response rate) using maternal interviews and medical record abstraction collected during the postpartum hospitalization. The 20-item Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression (CES-D) scale was used to measure depressive symptoms. The 14-item social networks in adult relations questionnaire was used to assess the mothers relationship with the FOB. Logistic regression was used to explore the interaction between CES-D and FOB support with regard to PTB risk. We adjusted for maternal advanced age, income, education level, smoking status, hypertension, prenatal care and BMI. Results The PTB rate in this cohort was 17.7%. Among women with FOB scale < 60 (less support), the odd ratio (OR) of PTB for women with CES-D scores ≥ 23 (severe depressive symptoms) as compared to CES-D scores < 23 (no severe depressive symptoms) was 2.57 [95% confidence interval (CI): 1.68, 3.94; p < 0.001]. Among women with FOB scores ≥ 60 (more support), the odds of PTB in women with CES-D scores ≥ 23 did not significantly differ from the odds of PTB in women with CES-D scores < 23 (OR = 1.34; 95% CI: 0.74, 2.44; p = 0.3). After adjustment for covariates, among women with FOB scores < 60, the OR of PTB for women with CES-D scores ≥ 23 compared to < 23 was 2.79 (95% CI: 1.75, 4.45; p < 0.001). Among women with FOB scores ≥ 60, the odds of PTB in women with CES-D scores ≥ 23 was not statistically significantly different compared to the odds of PTB in women with CES-D scores < 23 (OR = 1.21; 95% CI: 0.62, 2.35; p = 0.6). The interaction term was statistically significant (p = 0.04). Discussion/Conclusions The adverse effect of depressive symptoms on risk of PTB may be buffered by factors such as a supportive relationship with the FOB.


Maternal and Child Health Journal | 2018

Family Care Curriculum: A Parenting Support Program for Families Experiencing Homelessness

Sandy L. Sheller; Karen M. Hudson; Joan Rosen Bloch; Bridget Biddle; E. Stephanie Krauthamer Ewing; Jaime C. Slaughter-Acey

Purpose In the United States, families with children characterize the fastest growing portion of the homeless population. Parenting for families experiencing homelessness presents unique challenges since families facing homelessness are disproportionately more likely to experience a myriad of interpersonal and contextual stressors that heighten the risk of parents engaging in suboptimal parenting approaches. This article describes the development and implementation of the Family Care Curriculum (FCC) train-the-trainer parenting support program specifically designed to support positive parenting in families experiencing homelessness. Description The FCC is a 6-week theory-based parenting intervention aimed to create positive shifts in parental attitudes to enhance sensitive and nurturing parenting and positive parent–child relationships. FCC assists parents in reflecting on how their own experiences contribute to some of their parenting beliefs, patterns, and behaviors. Parents are coached to imagine and understand the emotions, attachment, and developmental needs behind their children’s behaviors so they can maintain empathic and nurturing parenting responses in the context of cumulative and chronic stress. Parents are supported through learning to engage in self-care. A unique and important feature of the FCC is the inclusion of a culturally sensitive approach that takes into consideration the effects of racism, classism, and oppression on parent–child relationships. Conclusion FCC was designed, implemented, and championed by expert providers in the fields of family therapy, social work, and pediatrics to support parents experiencing homelessness. FCC adds to the body of effective attachment-based, trauma-informed, and culturally sensitive parenting interventions for improving parent–child relations and family health amongst vulnerable populations.


Maternal and Child Health Journal | 2018

Maternal Socioeconomic Mobility and Preterm Delivery: A Latent Class Analysis

Yan Tian; Claudia Holzman; Jaime C. Slaughter-Acey; Claire Margerison-Zilko; Zhehui Luo; David Todem

Objective Growing evidence suggests that maternal socioeconomic mobility (SM) is associated with pregnancy outcomes. Our study investigated the association between maternal SM from childhood to adulthood and the risk of preterm delivery (PTD), and examined heterogeneity of associations by race/ethnicity. Methods In this study, 3019 pregnant women enrolled from 5 Michigan communities at 16–27 weeks’ gestation (1998–2004) provided their parents’ socioeconomic position (SEP) indicators (education, occupation, receipt of public assistance) and their own and child’s father’s SEP indicators (education, occupation, Medicaid status, and household income) at the time of enrollment. Latent class analysis was used to identify latent classes of childhood SEP indicators, adulthood SEP indicators, and SM from childhood to adulthood, respectively. A model-based approach to latent class analysis with distal outcome assessed relations between latent class and PTD, overall and within race/ethnicity groups. Results Three latent classes (low, middle, high) were identified for childhood SEP indicators and adulthood SEP indicators, respectively; while four latent classes (static low, upward, downward, and static high) best described SM. Women with upward SM had decreased odds of PTD (Odds ratio = 0.60, 95% confidence interval: 0.42, 0.87), compared to those with static low SEP. This SM advantage was true for all women and most pronounced in white/others women. Conclusions Maternal experiences of upward SM may be important considerations when assessing PTD risk. Our results support the argument that policies and programs aimed at improving women’s SEP could lower PTD rates.


Maternal and Child Health Journal | 2016

Movin’ on Up: Socioeconomic Mobility and the Risk of Delivering a Small-for-Gestational Age Infant

Jaime C. Slaughter-Acey; Claudia Holzman; Danuelle Calloway; Yan Tian

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Claudia Holzman

Michigan State University

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Jodi Wolff

Boston Children's Hospital

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Mark R. Corkins

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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