Authors
Roxana Khalili, Yisi Liu, Yan Xu, Karl O'Sharkey, Nathan Pavlovic, Crystal McClure, Fred Lurmann, Tingyu Yang, Xinci Chen, Mario Vigil, Brendan Grubbs, Layla Al Marayati, Deborah Lerner, Nathana Lurvey, Carmen J Marsit, Jill Johnston, Theresa M Bastain, Carrie V Breton, Shohreh F Farzan, Rima Habre
Published in
Environmental science & technology. Jun 18, 2025. Epub Jun 18, 2025.
Abstract
We investigated associations between preconception and prenatal heat stress and wildfire (WF) smoke exposures on adverse birth outcomes and whether neighborhood climate vulnerability is an effect modifier in the Maternal And Developmental Risks from Environmental and Social stressors cohort (N = 713). Generalized linear models were fit to test the association between exposures and small-for-gestational-age (SGA), low birthweight (LBW), and Fenton growth z-score outcomes, adjusting for confounders. Living in a high climate vulnerability index neighborhood was tested as an effect modifier. During preconception, increases in heat stress and WF measures were associated with higher odds of SGA. Living in the most climate-vulnerable neighborhoods during preconception significantly modified and nearly doubled the odds of SGA with exposure to heat stress. Similarly, heat stress and WF exposure in trimester-specific time periods were associated with adverse birth outcomes. Conversely, third-trimester exposures were associated with lower odds of LBW. Throughout pregnancy, two measures of infant size (SGA and Fenton z-scores) were lower among those with greater exposure to multiple WF exposures. This study highlights how living in more climate-vulnerable neighborhoods significantly modifies the effect of heat stress on SGA, suggesting that the increasing adaptation capacity of communities may strengthen climate change resilience.
PMID:
40532130
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 19 Jun 2025.
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