%0 Journal Article %T Influence of maternal and social factors as predictors of low birth weight in Italy %A Carmelo GA Nobile %A Gianluca Raffaele %A Carlo Altomare %A Maria Pavia %J BMC Public Health %D 2007 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1471-2458-7-192 %X The study was carried out in a non-teaching hospital in Catanzaro (Italy). All LBW and very LBW newborns (200) were included in the study and a random sample of 400 newborns weighing ¡Ý 2500 g was selected. Data were collected from the delivery certificates during one year. Smoking activity of mother and familiar and/or social support during pregnancy was gathered through telephone interviews.Overall annual LBW rate was 11.8%. Among LBW newborn there were 125 preterm and 75 term. Younger mothers, those who smoked during pregnancy, and had fewer prenatal care visits were more likely to deliver a LBW child; moreover, preterm newborns, delivered by caesarean section, and twin or multiple birth were significantly more likely to have a LBW. The comparison of very LBW (<1500 g) to LBW newborns showed that a very LBW was significantly more likely in newborns delivered by less educated mothers, those who work outside the home, live in smaller towns, and had less echographies; moreover, as expected, very LBW newborns were more likely to be preterm.Several modifiable factors affect the risk of LBW, even when universal access to health care is freely available, but socio-economic status appears to correlate only to very LBW.Low birth weight (LBW), as a result of preterm birth or of intrauterine growth retardation, is the strongest single factor associated with perinatal and neonatal mortality and an established determinant of post-natal and infant mortality. Moreover, birth weight is related to health outcomes in childhood, such as neurological deficits and lower cognitive skills [1-3] as well as in adulthood, such as high blood pressure, diabetes, coronary heart disease and stroke [4-7].LBW rates vary considerably among studies and countries, ranging from 3.1 to 13.3% [8-12] and United Nations have established among their institutional health goals to be reached by 2015 the reduction of LBW rates by one third of the current state [13].Several determinants have been associated %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/7/192