Prenatal exposure to residential greenness, fetal growth, and birth outcomes: a cohort study in New York City
Heo S, Afanasyeva Y, Liu M, Mehta-Lee S, Yang W, Trasande L, Bell M, Ghassabian A. Prenatal exposure to residential greenness, fetal growth, and birth outcomes: a cohort study in New York City. American Journal Of Epidemiology 2024, kwae436. PMID: 39562151, DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwae436.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchEstimated fetal weightPreterm birthBirth outcomesCohort studyOdds ratio of preterm birthAssociated with tLBWGreenspace exposurePreterm birth riskEnhanced vegetation indexProspective cohort studyExposure groupNeonatal outcomesFetal weightFetal maturityFetal growthPregnant womenFetal developmentMultivariate regression modelExposure to residential greennessOdds ratioQ1 groupQuartile of exposureHigh-exposure groupBirthweightAccessibility of parksAssociations Between Gestational Residential Radon Exposure and Term Low Birthweight in Connecticut, USA
Heo S, Li L, Son J, Koutrakis P, Bell M. Associations Between Gestational Residential Radon Exposure and Term Low Birthweight in Connecticut, USA. Epidemiology 2024, 35: 834-843. PMID: 39042464, PMCID: PMC11560713, DOI: 10.1097/ede.0000000000001771.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchOdds ratioSingleton full-term birthsLow birth weight riskRadon exposureLow birthweightResidential radon exposureMaternal education levelLogistic regression modelsParticipant's addressFull-term birthImpaired fetal developmentInfant healthLow-incomeExposure to radonNational guidelinesExposure quartilesEducation levelGround-level exposuresExposure groupWeighted riskQuartile groupLow exposure groupReference groupFetal developmentGestational exposure