Night blindness occurs commonly among women during pregnancy in rural Nepal. We examined the relationship between maternal night blindness and the risk of mortality occurring among infants in the first 6 mo of life. Stratified analysis by maternal night blindness status during pregnancy was done for 10,000 women participating in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial of vitamin A and β-carotene supplementation. Mortality of infants of non-night blind women in all three supplementation groups was similar, and when combined, was 63/1000 live births. Relative to this, mortality was higher by 63% [95% confidence interval (Cl): 9-138%) and 50% (95% Cl: -3 to 133%) among infants of night blind women receiving placebo andβ-carotene, respectively, but only by 14% (95% Cl: -33 to 93%) among those receiving vitamin A. Thus, 6-mo mortality was higher among infants of women who had night blindness during pregnancy. Maternal receipt of vitamin A reduced this risk.
CITATION STYLE
Christian, P., West, J., Khatry, S. K., LeClerq, S. C., Kimbrough-Pradhan, E., Katz, J., & Shrestha, S. R. (2001). Maternal night blindness increases risk of mortality in the first 6 months of life among infants in Nepal. Journal of Nutrition, 131(5), 1510–1512. https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/131.5.1510
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