Resilience as a potential modifier of racial inequities in preterm birth.

Redhunt, Allyson M, Rachel Ledyard, Ai -Ris Y Collier, Michele R Hacker, and Heather H Burris. 2023. “Resilience As a Potential Modifier of Racial Inequities in Preterm Birth.”. Annals of Epidemiology 83: 54-59.e1.

Abstract

PURPOSE: In the US, preterm birth (PTB) is 55% more common among Black compared to White individuals and psychosocial stressors may contribute. Resilience is associated with improved health outcomes; whether it modifies PTB inequity is unknown. We hypothesized high resilience would reduce inequities in PTB risk.

METHODS: This study analyzes data from 535 pregnancies among Black (n = 101, 19%) and White (n = 434, 81%) participants from a prospective cohort. Participants completed the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale. We calculated risk ratios (RR) stratified by resilience tertiles to test for effect measure modification.

RESULTS: Among those in the lowest resilience tertile, there were six (20.7%) PTBs among Black and seven (4.9%) among White participants (RR: 4.26; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.53, 11.81). Among those in the highest resilience tertile, there were 8 (18.2%) PTBs among Black and 14 (9.5%) among White participants (RR: 1.92; 95% CI: 0.87, 4.24. The adjusted Black:White RR was 2.00 (95% CI 0.47, 8.64) in the lowest and 3.49 (95% CI 1.52, 8.01) in the highest tertile.

CONCLUSIONS: Black-White PTB inequity did not differ among resilience strata and remained significant in the highest tertile. Our findings suggest that high resilience is inadequate to overcome Black:White racial inequity in PTB.

Last updated on 07/25/2025
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