Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
11005233 | Health & Place | 2018 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Residential mobility was significantly associated with several maternal characteristics and complications during pregnancy. The study also showed a lower likelihood of adverse birth outcomes among movers than non-movers, suggesting that moving might be related to reduce exposure to environmental hazards. These results confirm the hypothesis that residential mobility may be important with respect to exposure misclassification and that this misclassification may vary by subpopulations.
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Authors
Zhongfeng Tang, Hanru Zhang, Haiya Bai, Ya Chen, Nan Zhao, Min Zhou, Hongmei Cui, Catherine Lerro, Xiaojuan Lin, Ling Lv, Chong Zhang, Honghong Zhang, Ruifeng Xu, Daling Zhu, Yun Dang, Xudong Han, Xiaoying Xu, Ru Lin, Yawei Zhang,