TY - JOUR
T1 - Single motherhood, alcohol dependence, and smoking during pregnancy
T2 - A propensity score analysis
AU - Waldron, Mary
AU - Bucholz, Kathleen K.
AU - Lian, Min
AU - Lessov-Schlaggar, Christina N.
AU - Miller, Ruth Huang
AU - Lynskey, Michael T.
AU - Knopik, Valerie S.
AU - Madden, Pamela A.F.
AU - Heath, Andrew C.
PY - 2017/9/1
Y1 - 2017/9/1
N2 - Objective: Few studies linking single motherhood and maternal smoking during pregnancy consider correlated risk from problem substance use beyond history of smoking and concurrent use of alcohol. In the present study, we used propensity score methods to examine whether the risk of smoking during pregnancy associated with single motherhood is the result of potential confounders, including alcohol dependence. Method: Data were drawn from mothers participating in a birth cohort study of their female like-sex twin offspring (n = 257 African ancestry; n = 1,711 European or other ancestry). We conducted standard logistic regression models predicting smoking during pregnancy from single motherhood at twins’ birth, followed by propensity score analyses comparing single-mother and two-parent families stratified by predicted probability of single motherhood. Results: In standard models, single motherhood predicted increased risk of smoking during pregnancy in European ancestry but not African ancestry families. In propensity score analyses, rates of smoking during pregnancy were elevated in single-mother relative to two-parent European ancestry families across much of the spectrum a priori risk of single motherhood. Among African ancestry families, within-strata comparisons of smoking during pregnancy by single-mother status were nonsignificant. Conclusions: These findings highlight single motherhood as a unique risk factor for smoking during pregnancy in European ancestry mothers, over and above alcohol dependence. Additional research is needed to identify risks, beyond single motherhood, associated with smoking during pregnancy in African ancestry mothers.
AB - Objective: Few studies linking single motherhood and maternal smoking during pregnancy consider correlated risk from problem substance use beyond history of smoking and concurrent use of alcohol. In the present study, we used propensity score methods to examine whether the risk of smoking during pregnancy associated with single motherhood is the result of potential confounders, including alcohol dependence. Method: Data were drawn from mothers participating in a birth cohort study of their female like-sex twin offspring (n = 257 African ancestry; n = 1,711 European or other ancestry). We conducted standard logistic regression models predicting smoking during pregnancy from single motherhood at twins’ birth, followed by propensity score analyses comparing single-mother and two-parent families stratified by predicted probability of single motherhood. Results: In standard models, single motherhood predicted increased risk of smoking during pregnancy in European ancestry but not African ancestry families. In propensity score analyses, rates of smoking during pregnancy were elevated in single-mother relative to two-parent European ancestry families across much of the spectrum a priori risk of single motherhood. Among African ancestry families, within-strata comparisons of smoking during pregnancy by single-mother status were nonsignificant. Conclusions: These findings highlight single motherhood as a unique risk factor for smoking during pregnancy in European ancestry mothers, over and above alcohol dependence. Additional research is needed to identify risks, beyond single motherhood, associated with smoking during pregnancy in African ancestry mothers.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85029938728&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.15288/jsad.2017.78.745
DO - 10.15288/jsad.2017.78.745
M3 - Article
C2 - 28930062
AN - SCOPUS:85029938728
SN - 1937-1888
VL - 78
SP - 745
EP - 753
JO - Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs
JF - Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs
IS - 5
ER -