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Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective Michael C. Lu, MD, MPH Associate Professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Public Health UCLA Schools of Medicine and Public Health UCLA Center for Healthier Children, Families and Communities National Center for Infancy & Early Childhood Health Policy MCHB-AIM Child & Adolescent Policy Support Center Alameda County Building Blocks for Healthy Babies, Healthy Families, & Healthy Communities September 10, 2009

Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

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Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective. Michael C. Lu, MD, MPH Associate Professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Public Health UCLA Schools of Medicine and Public Health UCLA Center for Healthier Children, Families and Communities - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Michael C. Lu, MD, MPHAssociate Professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Public Health

UCLA Schools of Medicine and Public HealthUCLA Center for Healthier Children, Families and CommunitiesNational Center for Infancy & Early Childhood Health Policy

MCHB-AIM Child & Adolescent Policy Support Center

Alameda CountyBuilding Blocks for Healthy Babies, Healthy Families,

& Healthy CommunitiesSeptember 10, 2009

Page 2: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective
Page 3: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective
Page 4: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective
Page 5: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results

Benjamin Franklin

Page 6: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Acknowledgment

Mario Drummond Neal Halfon Milt Kotelchuck Cheri Pies

Page 7: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Acknowledgment

Page 8: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Life-Course Perspective

A way of looking at life not as disconnected stages, but as an integrated continuum

Page 9: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Life Course Perspective

Lu MC, Halfon N. Racial and ethnic disparities in birth outcomes: a life-course perspective.Matern Child Health J. 2003;7:13-30.

Page 10: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Life Course Perspective

Early programming Cumulative pathways Reinventing MCH

Page 11: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Early Programming

Page 12: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective
Page 13: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Barker HypothesisBirth Weight and Coronary Heart Disease

0

0.25

0.5

0.75

1

1.25

1.5

<5.0 5.0-5.5 5.6-7.0 7.1-8.5 8.6-10.0 >10.0

Birthweight (lbs)

Age Adjusted Relative Risk

Rich-Edwards JW, Stampfer MJ, Manson JE, Rosner B, Hankinson SE, Colditz GA et al. Birth weight and risk of cardiovascular disease in a cohort of women followed up since 1976. Br Med Jr 1997;315:396-400.

Page 14: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Barker HypothesisBirth Weight and Hypertension

155

160

165

170

Sys

toli

c P

ress

ure

(m

mH

g)

<=5.5 5.6-6.5 6.6-7.5 7.6-8.5 >8.5

Birthweight (lbs)

Law CM, de Swiet M, Osmond C, Fayers PM, Barker DJP, Cruddas AM, et al. Initiation of hypertension in utero and its amplification throughout life. Br Med J 1993;306:24-27.

Page 15: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Barker HypothesisBirth Weight and Insulin Resistance Syndrome

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

<5.5 5.6-6.5 6.6-7.5 7.6-8.5 8.6-9.5 >9.5

Birthweight (lbs)

Odds ratio adjusted for BMI

Barker DJP, Hales CN, Fall CHD, Osmond C, Phipps K, Clark PMS. Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus, hypertension and hyperlipidaemia (Syndrome X): Relation to reduced fetal growth. Diabetologia 1993;36:62-67.

Page 16: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Maternal Stress & Fetal Programming

Page 17: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Prenatal Stress & Programming of the Brain

Prenatal stress (animal model) Hippocampus

Site of learning & memory formation Stress down-regulates glucocorticoid receptors Loss of negative feedback; overactive HPA axis

Amygdala

Site of anxiety and fear Stress up-regulates glucocorticoid receptors Accentuated positive feedback; overactive HPA

axis

Welberg LAM, Seckl JR. Prenatal stress, glucocorticoids and the programming of the brain.J Neuroendocrinol 2001;13:113-28.

Page 18: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Prenatal Programming of the Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis

Welberg LAM, Seckl JR. Prenatal stress, glucocorticoids and the programming of the brain.J Neuroendocrinol 2001;13:113-28.

Page 19: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Epigenetics

Gibbs WW. The Unseen Genome: Beyond DNA. Scientific American 2003

Page 20: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

EpigeneticsSame Genome, Different Epigenome

R.A. Waterland, R.A. Jirtle, "Transposable elements: targets for early nutritional effects on epigenetic gene regulation," Mol Cell Biol, 23:5293-300, 2003. Reprinted in the New Scientist 2004

Page 21: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Prenatal Programming of Childhood Obesity

Page 22: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Epidemic of Childhood Overweight & Obesity

0

5

10

15

20

25

1976-1980 1988-1994 1999-2002

Perc

en

t

Black Hispanic White

Source: National Center for Health Statistics, National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey

Note: Estimate not available for 1976-1980 for Hispanic; overweight defined as BMI at or above the 95th percentile ofr the CDC BMI-for-age growth charts

Children 6-18 Overweight

Page 23: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Prenatal Programming ofChildhood Overweight & Obesity

Page 24: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Maternal Diabetes & Intrauterine Hyperglycemia

Intrauterine Hyperinsulinemia (Fetal Pancreatic β Cells)

Prenatal& PostnatalHyperleptinemia

Preadipocyte Differentiation

Adipocyte Hyperplasia

HypothalamicLeptin Resistance

Pancreatic β- Cell Leptin Resistance

HyperphagiaHyperinsulinism

Programmed Insulin

Resistance

Postnatal Hyperinsulinemia

Adipogenesis

Prenatal Programming of Childhood Obesity

Page 25: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Cumulative Pathways

Page 26: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Photo: http://www.lam.mus.ca.us/cats/encyclo/smilodon/

Page 27: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Allostasis: Maintain Stability through Change

McEwen BS. Protective and damaging effects of stress mediators. N Eng J Med. 1998;338:171-9.

Page 28: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Allostastic Load:Wear and Tear from Chronic Stress

McEwen BS. Protective and damaging effects of stress mediators. N Eng J Med. 1998;338:171-9.

Page 29: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

HPA Axis & Immune SystemChikanza 2000

Page 30: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Stressed vs. Stressed Out Stressed

Increased cardiac output

Increased available glucose

Enhanced immune functions

Growth of neurons in hippocampus & prefrontal cortex

Stressed Out

Hypertension & cardiovascular diseases

Glucose intolerance & insulin resistance

Infection & inflammation

Atrophy & death of neurons in hippocampus & prefrontal cortex

Page 31: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Allostasis & Allostatic Load

McEwen BS, Lasley EN. The end of stress: As we know it. Washington DC: John Henry Press. 2002

Page 32: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Rethinking Preterm Birth

Page 33: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Sequelae of Preterm BirthSequelae of Preterm Birth

Term Births

Preterm Birth

75%Perinatal Perinatal MortalityMortality

NeurologicNeurologicDisabilitiesDisabilities

50%

12%

Page 34: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Racial & Ethnic DisparitiesInfant Mortality, 2005

13.7

5.7

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

African American White

Deaths Per 1,000 Live Births

NCHS 2008

NCHS 2008

Page 35: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Racial & Ethnic DisparitiesPreterm Births < 37 Weeks

18.4

11.7

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

20

African American White

Percent of Live Births

NCHS 2008

Year 2010 Goal

Page 36: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Racial & Ethnic DisparitiesVery Preterm Births < 32 Weeks

4.17

1.64

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

3.5

4

4.5

African American White

Percent of Live Singleton Births

Year 2010 Goal

NCHS 2008

Page 37: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Rethinking Preterm Birth

Vulnerability to preterm delivery may be traced to not only exposure to stress & infection during pregnancy, but host response to stress & infection (e.g. stress reactivity & inflammatory dysregulation) patterned over the life course (early programming & cumulative allostatic load)

Page 38: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Preterm Birth &Maternal Ischemic Heart Disease

Kaplan-Meier plots of cumulative probability of survival without admission or death from ischemic heart disease after first pregnancy in relation to preterm birth

Smith et al Lancet 2001;357:2002-06

Page 39: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Reinventing MCH

Page 40: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Why Reinvent MCH?

Page 41: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Finland, 12.2

Denmark, 9.2

Portugal, 8.2

Czech Republic, 8

United Kingdom, 7.7

France, 7

New Zealand, 6.8

Canada, 5.9

Slovak Republic, 5.6

Switzerland, 5.5

Netherlands, 5.2

Germany, 5.2

Poland, 4.8

Spain, 4.6

Japan, 4.4

Hungary, 4.2

Australia, 3.9

Austria, 3.8

Greece, 2.8

Belium, 2.5

Ireland, 1.6

Sweden, 1

USA, 13.1

Norway, 0

Icleand, 0

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14

Maternal MortalitySource: OECD Health Data 2008

Page 42: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

New Zealand, 5.6

Canada, 5.3

United Kingdom, 5.3

Ireland, 4.9

Belgium, 4.7

Austria, 4.5

Netherlands, 4.4

Australia, 4.4

Denmark, 4.4

Switzerland, 4.2

Italy, 4.1

Germany, 4.1

France, 4

Portugal, 3.8

Czech Republic, 3.7

Spain, 3.5

Sweden, 3.1

Japan, 2.8

USA, 6.8

Greece, 4

Finland, 3.3

Norway, 3.2

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

Infant Mortality

Source: United Nations. Table 4. In: United Nations Demographic Yearbook, 2004. New York, NY: United Nations; 2007:73–93.

Page 43: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Racial & Ethnic DisparitiesPregnancy-Related Mortality Ratio, 1991-1999

30

8.1

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

African American White

Deaths Per 1,000 Live Births

Chang et al MMWR 2003

Page 44: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Racial & Ethnic DisparitiesInfant Mortality, 2005

13.7

5.7

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

African American White

Deaths Per 1,000 Live Births

NCHS 2008

Page 45: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Racial & Ethnic DisparitiesInfant Mortality, Alameda County, 2001-03

11.7

3.6

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

African American White

Deaths Per 1,000 Live Births

Alameda County Health Status Report, 2006: http://www.acgov.org/health/disparitiesStudy.pdf

Page 46: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Racial & Ethnic DisparitiesLow Birth Weight, Alameda County, 2001-03

12.4

5.9

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

African American White

Percentage of Live Births

Alameda County Health Status Report, 2006: http://www.acgov.org/health/disparitiesStudy.pdf

Page 47: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

How Can This Be?

Page 48: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

How Can This Be?

First, the pathways to better health do not generally depend on better health care, and second, even in those instances in which health care is important, too many Americans do not receive it, receive it too late, or receive poor-quality care.

Schroeder SA. NEJM 2007;357:1221-8

Page 49: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

How Can We Do Better?

1. Transform maternal and child healthcare

2. Assure the conditions in which all mothers and children can be healthy

Page 50: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

1. Transforming Maternal & Child Healthcare

Page 51: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Prenatal Care 1.0

ReceptionistMedical

Assistant

UltrasoundTechNurse Manager

Page 52: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Prenatal Care 2.0

Oral Health

TeratogenInformationServices

Primary &Specialty Care

SocialServices

Mental Health

NutritionalCounseling

ReceptionistMedical

Assistant

Ultrasound TechNurse Manager

High RiskOB

Family Support

Page 53: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

0 10 20 30 40 Years

Prenatal Care 3.0

NHVFRCPED

Rep

rodu

ctiv

e P

oten

tial

Optimal Health Development

Lower Health Development

Trajectory

Medical Home for Women’s Health

Medical Home for Adolescent Health

Pediatric Medical Home

Page 54: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Old Operating Logic (2.0) New Operating Logic (3.0)

Definition of Health Absence of disease and disability

Health is a positive concept emphasizing the development of social and personal resources, as well as physical capacities (Ottawa, 1986 & IOM 2004)

Goals of Health System Health maintenance and prolonging life of individual

Optimizing individual and population health

Client Model Individual Individual, community, and population

Health Production / Disease Causation

Biomedical Biopsychosocial, Life Course Health Development

Intervention Approach Diagnosis and treatment Emphasize disease prevention, health promotion and optimization

Time Frame Episodic Care Lifespan: Sensitive, Critical Periods to optimize health trajectories

Page 55: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

2. Assure Conditions in Which All Mothers & Children Can Be Healthy

Page 56: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Developmental Strategies Health development (health capital) Educational development (human capital) Economic development (material capital) Family development (relational capital) Community development (social capital)

Page 57: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Educational Development1. Preconception and prenatal care2. Parenting education 3. Child care 4. Universal Preschool5. Early Head Start and Head Start6. K-12 – small class size, teacher quality, standards7. After school and summer programs8. Youth development9. Health education/physical education10. Comprehensive school health clinics

Page 58: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Racial and Ethnic DisparitiesBirths to Unmarried Mothers

69.1

40.9

25.8

01020

3040

5060

708090

100

African American Hispanic American White American

Percent of Live Births

Page 59: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Family Development

1. Human development (education, employment, legal/social services)

2. Life skills training3. Reproductive health4. Violence prevention5. Marriage counseling/family therapy6. Economic development7. Criminal justice system reforms8. Tax reform9. Welfare reform10. Child support reform

Page 60: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Economic Development1. Raise minimum wage2. Expand Earned Income Tax Credits3. Strengthen collective bargaining4. Providing safety net – unemployment, housing, food stamps5. Providing job training and retraining6. Assuring universal healthcare7. Expanding access to family and medical leave, quality childcare,

universal preschool8. Teach financial literacy9. Extend microloan programs10. Macroeconomic policies

Page 61: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Community Development1. Economic development 2. Affordable decent housing 3. Delink schools and property tax 4. Community policing 5. Municipal services & infrastructural development 6. Protect clean air and water7. Promote food quality and safety8. Mobilize community activism9. Create social capital10. Address racism at all levels

Page 62: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

HealthcareEducation

CommunityDevelopment

Environment

MCH

Page 63: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

"We must become the change we want to see.”

- MOHANDAS GANDHI

Page 64: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

NMPPMCH Life-Course

Organization

Page 65: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Closing the Black-White Gap in Birth Outcomes:A 12-Point Plan

Racism

Page 66: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

MATERNAL LIFETIME EXPOSURE TO INTERPERSONAL RACISM IN 3 OR MORE DOMAINS AND INFANT BIRTH WEIGHT

(Collins et al, AJPH, 2004)

02468

101214161820

% exposed to racism

VLBW (n=104) non-LBW(n=208)

OR=2.7 (1.3-5.4)

Page 67: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Jones CP. Levels of racism: A theoretical framework and a gardener’s tale. AJPH 2000;90:1212-5

Page 68: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

Closing the Black-White Gap in Birth Outcomes:A 12-Point Plan

1. Provide interconception care to women with prior adverse pregnancy outcomes2. Increase access to preconception care for African American women3. Improve the quality of prenatal care4. Expand healthcare access over the life course5. Strengthen father involvement in African American families6. Enhance service coordination and systems integration7. Create reproductive social capital in African American communities8. Invest in community building and urban renewal9. Close the education gap10. Reduce poverty among Black families11. Support working mothers and families12. Undo racism

Lu MC, Kotelchuck M, Hogan V, Jones L, Jones C, Halfon N. Closing the Black-White gap in birth outcomes: A life-course approach. Ethnicity and Disease Forthcoming in 2009.

Page 69: Reinventing Maternal & Child Health: A Life-Course Perspective

All this will not be finished in the first 100 days. Nor will it be finished in the first 1,000 days, nor in the life of this Administration, nor even perhaps in our lifetime on this planet. But let us begin.

John F Kennedy (1961)

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