Pregnancy is a key opportunity to affect the epidemiology and to enhance reduction of women's tobacco and problem alcohol use. The opportunities to provide pregnant women with tobacco and alcohol cessation resources appear to be strongest when integrated into community-based health services, with attention to generating support in mothers'networks of family and friends. Ecological models of maternal substance use to date have tended to examine a limited set of social processes or neighborhood structural characteristics but not both, to focus on smoking only, and to focus on infant outcomes, while studies of neighborhood effects on birth outcomes may fail to include maternal substance use. The limited development of contextual theory focused on maternal substance use as an outcome is part of the problem. The goal of the proposed research is to investigate the role of neighborhood structural aspects and social processes in association with maternal alcohol and tobacco use in the perinatal and early childhood parenting periods. Specifically, we will investigate the relationship between individual characteristics of mothers (in a nationally representative dataset) and the social ecology of neighborhoods as predictors of maternal alcohol and tobacco use patterns over time. The availability of a rich set of neighborhood social process variables in the Birth Cohort of the Early Childhood Longitudinal Survey dataset will be augmented by constructs of neighborhood socioeconomic status and material deprivation based on data from the 2000 Census, and neighborhood smoking prevalence estimates from the Current Population Survey-Tobacco Use Supplement 2000. Our proposed research will examine how neighborhood structural characteristics and social processes relate to each other and to individual characteristics that are the proximate determinants of maternal substance use from preconception through the early childhood parenting period. Diverging from most research to date, we will apply latent class analysis and growth mixture modeling to characterize profiles of mothers according to both their alcohol and tobacco use and individual trajectories of use over time. Individual and neighborhood measures will be examined for direct effects associated with these patterns and trajectories. Subsequently, we will apply latent variable pathway analyses to assess potential mediation of neighborhood latent variables by individual characteristics, and we will analyze whether results of pathway analyses apply to different subgroups of our sample (moderation analyses). The results will be applied toward further research in three directions: policy and interventions for mothers, the study of child health outcomes, and enhanced research in social processes, structural effects, and policy inputs during a critical period for women's and children's health.

Public Health Relevance

and clinical initiatives to protect maternal and child health by reducing alcohol and tobacco use during pregnancy work for some but not all women, and even women who reduce use during pregnancy tend to relapse after the birth of their child. It is essential to have a better understanding of the patterns of women's substance use from pre-conception through early childhood parenting, elucidating the social context that supports or hinders healthy behaviors. This research will inform clinical guidelines for prenatal and postnatal care (key intervention opportunities), particularly in terms of targeting specific subpopulations and reducing maternal and child health disparities.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01DA030496-03
Application #
8516485
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-PSE-J (55))
Program Officer
Deeds, Bethany
Project Start
2011-08-15
Project End
2014-07-31
Budget Start
2013-08-01
Budget End
2014-07-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2013
Total Cost
$223,340
Indirect Cost
$86,540
Name
National Opinion Research Center
Department
Type
DUNS #
069512291
City
Chicago
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60637
Liu, Weiwei; Mumford, Elizabeth A (2017) Concurrent Trajectories of Female Drinking and Smoking Behaviors Throughout Transitions to Pregnancy and Early Parenthood. Prev Sci 18:416-427
Mumford, Elizabeth A; Liu, Weiwei (2016) Social Integration and Maternal Smoking: A Longitudinal Analysis of a National Birth Cohort. Matern Child Health J 20:1586-97
Mumford, Elizabeth A; Liu, Weiwei; Joseph, Hannah (2016) Postpartum Domestic Violence in Homes With Young Children: The Role of Maternal and Paternal Drinking. Violence Against Women :
Liu, Weiwei; Mumford, Elizabeth A; Petras, Hanno (2015) Maternal patterns of postpartum alcohol consumption by age: a longitudinal analysis of adult urban mothers. Prev Sci 16:353-63
Mumford, Elizabeth A; Liu, Weiwei (2015) Growth Models of Maternal Smoking Behavior: Individual and Contextual Factors. Subst Use Misuse 50:1261-73
Mumford, Elizabeth A; Hair, Elizabeth C; Yu, Tzy-Chyi et al. (2014) Women’s longitudinal smoking patterns from preconception through child’s kindergarten entry: profiles of biological mothers of a 2001 US birth cohort. Matern Child Health J 18:810-20