News

Prenatal GBS Screening: Less Likely in Hispanic Women, Others


 

Hispanic women and those who receive prenatal care at a hospital or clinic were less likely to be screened for group B streptococcus in North Carolina during 2002–2003, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported.

In 2002, the CDC began analyzing rates of universal prenatal screening for vaginal and rectal group B streptococcus (GBS) colonization at 35–37 weeks' gestation in the North Carolina Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS), a population-based monthly mail/telephone survey of randomly selected women in the state who have recently delivered a live-born infant.

The data comprise responses from 3,027 women who were included in the sample. In 2002, 70% reported having been tested for GBS during their most recent pregnancy, 11% said they had not been tested, and 19% did not know whether they had been tested. In 2003, those proportions were 74%, 8%, and 18%, respectively, the CDC reported (MMWR 2005:54:700–3).

Among the women who knew their GBS status, the factors significantly associated with lack of prenatal screening on multivariate analysis were Hispanic ethnicity, receipt of prenatal care primarily at a hospital clinic or health department, and lack of prenatal HIV testing. Those same factors also were associated with lack of knowledge of GBS screening, along with black race, other race, and Medicaid payment of delivery.

Recommended Reading

West Nile Virus Season Off to Slow Start : So far, people have been infected in Colorado, South Dakota, Arizona, California, and New Mexico.
MDedge Pediatrics
Federal Officials Aim to Boost Confidence in Vaccines
MDedge Pediatrics
Global Attention Needed to Combat HIV/AIDS Epidemic
MDedge Pediatrics
Clinical Capsules
MDedge Pediatrics
Data Watch: Estimated Chickenpox Vaccination Coverage, 2003
MDedge Pediatrics
Antibiotics Not Always Needed In Childhood Conjunctivitis
MDedge Pediatrics
EGNR Bacteremia Complicates Rotavirus Disease
MDedge Pediatrics
Hand Sanitizing Gel Cuts Spread of Stomach Bugs
MDedge Pediatrics
Idaho Syphilis Outbreak Is Tapering Off
MDedge Pediatrics
Helicobacter pylori Tests Are Limited in Children
MDedge Pediatrics