Relationship between smoking, alcoholism and caffeine consumption and foetal death in ecuadorian pregnant women

Authors

  • Patricio Jaramillo Guerrero
  • Angélica Herrera Martínez
  • José Sixto Calvopiña del Castillo

Keywords:

smoking, alcoholism, caffeine, fetal death, pregnant women

Abstract

Introduction: Fetal demise after the 20th week of gestation, but before birth, can originate for a variety of reasons, ranging from maternal-related factors to complications in the placenta or the fetus itself.

Objective: The objective of the study was to relate the consumption of tobacco, alcohol, and caffeine to foetal death in Ecuadorian pregnant women.

Methods: The study corresponded to the relational level of research and was observational, cross-sectional, analytical and prospective. The study population consisted of 164 Ecuadorian pregnant women, and a probabilistic sampling technique (simple random sampling) was used. The Phi coefficient was used as a statistical technique.

Results: The results indicated that no significant associations were found between smoking (χ² = 0.801, p = 0.371), alcoholism (χ² = 0.001, p = 0.982), and caffeine consumption (χ² = 0.453, p = 0.501) with fetal death.

Conclusions: There was no evidence of a significant association between tobacco, alcohol or caffeine use and fetal death in Ecuadorian pregnant women. These findings suggest that other factors may be more important in the occurrence of fetal death in this population, which emphasises the importance of continuing to investigate and understand the possible causes of this health problem.

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Published

2023-12-18

How to Cite

1.
Jaramillo Guerrero P, Herrera Martínez A, Calvopiña del Castillo JS. Relationship between smoking, alcoholism and caffeine consumption and foetal death in ecuadorian pregnant women. Rev Cubana Inv Bioméd [Internet]. 2023 Dec. 18 [cited 2026 Feb. 10];42(2). Available from: https://revibiomedica.sld.cu/index.php/ibi/article/view/3138