Socioeconomic barriers to informed decisionmaking regarding maternal serum screening for down syndrome: results of the French National Perinatal Survey of 1998. - Archive ouverte HAL Access content directly
Journal Articles American Journal of Public Health Year : 2004

Socioeconomic barriers to informed decisionmaking regarding maternal serum screening for down syndrome: results of the French National Perinatal Survey of 1998.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: We sought to evaluate socioeconomic disparities in serum screening for Down syndrome and assess whether such disparities are more likely to reflect limits in access or information or, rather, informed decisionmaking. METHODS: A nationally representative sample of 12 869 French women completed interviews after giving birth. RESULTS: We found substantial disparities in the likelihood of (1) women not being offered screening, (2) screening not being offered as a result of late prenatal care, and (3) women not knowing whether or not they had undergone screening. Except in the case of nationality, there was essentially no evidence of differences in refusal of testing. CONCLUSIONS: Rather than representing informed decisionmaking, socioeconomic disparities in screening for Down syndrome are mostly due to limits in access or to information.
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
finaldraftfebruary03.manuscripttext.sesdepistage.pdf (177.95 Ko) Télécharger le fichier
Loading...

Dates and versions

inserm-00128710 , version 1 (06-02-2007)

Identifiers

  • HAL Id : inserm-00128710 , version 1
  • PUBMED : 14998818

Cite

Babak Khoshnood, Béatrice Blondel, Catherine de Vigan, Gérard Bréart. Socioeconomic barriers to informed decisionmaking regarding maternal serum screening for down syndrome: results of the French National Perinatal Survey of 1998.. American Journal of Public Health, 2004, 94 (3), pp.484-91. ⟨inserm-00128710⟩
76 View
214 Download

Altmetric

Share

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More