Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

Menu
  • About RWJF
  • Our Work
  • Research & Publications
View All:
  • Grants
  • Topics
  • Blogs

Low-birthweight Infants

You are now viewing 1 - 3 of 3 results

Sort results by:
  • Relevance
  • Alphabetical Order
  • Publication Date

Refine Your Results

  • Topic: Low-birthweight infants
  • Race/Ethnicity: Black (incl. African American)
By Topic
  • Health policy (2)
  • Racial disparities (1)
  • Social determinants of health (1)
  • Medical treatment facilities (1)
  • Hospitals and hospital systems (1)
  • Financial barriers to care (1)
  • Cultural, gender, racial, religious and ethnic barriers (1)
  • Acute care (1)
  • Inpatient care (1)
  • Prenatal/perinatal/neonatal care (1)
  • Quality of care (1)
  • At-Risk/vulnerable people (1)
  • Pregnancy (1)
  • Disparities in quality of care (1)
By Content
  • Content Type
    • Journal Article (3)
  • Program Area
    • Human Capital (3)
By Demographics
  • Age
    • Children (0-5 years) (2)
  • Gender
    • Women and girls (2)
  • Location
    • National (2)
  • States and Territories
    • Vermont (VT) NE (1)

Mortality Among Very Low-Birthweight Infants in Hospitals Serving Minority Populations

November 30, 2005 | Journal Article

Minority-serving hospitals may provide lower quality of care to VLBW infants compared with other hospitals. Because VLBW black infants are disproportionately treated by minority-serving hospitals.

Maternal Upward Socioeconomic Mobility and Black-White Disparities in Infant Birthweight

November 1, 2006 | Journal Article

The authors study the extent to which upward socioeconomic mobility limits the probability that black and white women who spent their childhoods in or near poverty will give birth to a low-birthweight baby. Data from the National Longitudinal Survey ...

It's the Skin You're in

January 1, 2009 | Journal Article

In this study, the authors consider the effects of racism on African American women's experience of childbirth. Using focus groups, the authors explore whether racism and its ensuing stress is responsible for the high number of preterm African-American babies.

RWJF Home → Topics → Low-birthweight Infants
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Email
  • RSS

Our mission: to improve the health and health care of all Americans.

  • About RWJF
    • Our Mission
    • Program Areas
    • From Our President
    • Leadership & Staff
    • Annual Reports
    • Newsroom
    • Job Opportunities
    • Office Location
    • Our Policies
  • Our Work
    • Health Policy
    • Prevention
    • Cost and Value
    • Leadership
    • All Topics
  • Program Areas
    • Childhood Obesity
    • Coverage
    • Human Capital
    • Pioneer
    • Public Health
    • Quality/Equality
    • Vulnerable Populations
  • Research & Publications
    • Find RWJF Research
    • Assessing Our Impact
    • How We Work
    • Data Center
    • RWJF DataHub
  • Grants
    • What We Fund
    • Calls for Proposals
    • Grantee Resources
    • FAQs
  • Blogs
    • Human Capital
    • New Public Health
    • Pioneering Ideas
  • My RWJF
    • Subscription Management
    • My Profile
  • Contact RWJF
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2001–2013 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. All Rights Reserved.