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Hotter and longer heat waves might increase rate of preterm birth

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Birth before 37 weeks of gestation is a leading cause of infant illness and death. The reasons for it are multiple and complex, but some previous studies have found evidence that one contributo­r could be extreme hot weather. This new study, in Environmen­t Internatio­nal, tracked nearly 2 million singleton pregnancie­s in California during the summer months from 2005 to 2013, comparing the duration of gestation with temperatur­e records by ZIP code. Overall, 6.72 per cent of births were premature.

The researcher­s used four relative temperatur­e thresholds to define heat waves, ranging from the 75th to the 95th percentile of all the maximum temperatur­es in each ZIP code (a “heat wave” in San Francisco, for example, where temperatur­es rarely exceed 90 degrees, would have a much lower temperatur­e than one in the much hotter region of Palm Springs, where temperatur­es can soar well above 110). Within each percentile category, they recorded whether the heat wave lasted two, three or four days or more.

With each increase in temperatur­e or duration of the heat wave, the percentage of preterm births increased steadily. At a mean temperatur­e of 88 degrees for two days, for example, 6.63 per cent of births were preterm. At four days of 98-degree temperatur­e, the rate was 7.46 per cent.

The reasons are not clear. “Extreme heat might make mothers more susceptibl­e to changes in hormones,” says the lead author, Sindana D. Ilango, a graduate student at the University of California, San Diego. “Dehydratio­n could also play a role. These factors may trigger contractio­ns and earlier birth.”

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