Title of article :
Lower agreement on behavioral factors than on medical conditions in self-reported data among pregnant latina women
Author/Authors :
Hessol، نويسنده , , Nancy A and Missett، نويسنده , , Brian and Fuentes-Afflick، نويسنده , , Elena، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Background
ent between self-reported data and data obtained from medical records is far from perfect and few studies have analyzed the element of language when self-reported data are given in one language and this information is recorded in another language in the medical record. Our objective was to assess agreement between self-reported data and medical record data with regard to prenatal risk factors in pregnant Latina women.
s
erviewed 350 Latina women at ≥20 weeksʹ gestation regarding alcohol use, tobacco use, use of prenatal vitamins, age, education, use of prenatal care, and medical conditions. Kappa statistic (κ) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) were used to calculate agreement between self-reported responses and medical record data. Multiple logistic regression analysis was used to evaluate effect of maternal characteristics on likelihood of disagreement.
s
ent between self-reported and medical record data was generally lower for behavioral factors (alcohol κ = 0.37 and prenatal vitamin use κ = 0.09) than for medical conditions (anemia κ = 0.63, gestational diabetes κ = 0.83, and hypertension κ = 0.68). In general, maternal characteristics did not significantly predict patterns of disagreement.
sions
pregnant Latina women, self-reported data on behavioral factors had lower agreement than self-reported data on medical conditions. Further study is needed to define the effect of other factors, such as social norms, on accuracy of self-reported data during pregnancy.
Keywords :
risk factors , Tobacco , Agreement , vitamins , alcohol , Pregnancy , Latina
Journal title :
Archives of Medical Research
Journal title :
Archives of Medical Research