4.5 Article

Atmospheric conditions, lunar phases, and childbirth: a multivariate analysis

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOMETEOROLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 4, Pages 661-667

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00484-011-0465-y

Keywords

Childbirth; Labor; Temperature; Atmospheric pressure; Tidal range; Lunar phases

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Our objective was to assess extrinsic influences upon childbirth. In a cohort of 1,826 days containing 17,417 childbirths among them 13,252 spontaneous labor admissions, we studied the influence of environment upon the high incidence of labor (defined by 75th percentile or higher), analyzed by logistic regression. The predictors of high labor admission included increases in outdoor temperature (odds ratio: 1.742, P = 0.045, 95%CI: 1.011 to 3.001), and decreases in atmospheric pressure (odds ratio: 1.269, P = 0.029, 95%CI: 1.055 to 1.483). In contrast, increases in tidal range were associated with a lower probability of high admission (odds ratio: 0.762, P = 0.030, 95%CI: 0.515 to 0.999). Lunar phase was not a predictor of high labor admission (P = 0.339). Using multivariate analysis, increases in temperature and decreases in atmospheric pressure predicted high labor admission, and increases of tidal range, as a measurement of the lunar gravitational force, predicted a lower probability of high admission.

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