Article
The risk of miscarriage and birth defects among women who use visual display terminals during pregnancy
Article first published online: 19 JAN 2007
DOI: 10.1002/ajim.4700130608
Copyright © 1988 Wiley Periodicals, Inc., A Wiley Company
Additional Information
How to Cite
Goldhaber, M. K., Polen, M. R. and Hiatt, R. A. (1988), The risk of miscarriage and birth defects among women who use visual display terminals during pregnancy. American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 13: 695–706. doi: 10.1002/ajim.4700130608
Publication History
- Issue published online: 19 JAN 2007
- Article first published online: 19 JAN 2007
- Manuscript Accepted: 30 DEC 1987
Funded by
- California Department of Health Services and the Community Service Program of Kaiser Foundation Hospitals
- Abstract
- References
- Cited By
Keywords:
- video display terminals;
- video display units;
- spontaneous abortion;
- occupations
Abstract
Use of visual display terminals (VDTs) was examined in a case-control study of pregnancy outcome among 1,583 pregnant women who attended three Kaiser Permanente obstetrics and gynecology clinics in Northern California, 1981-1982. We found a significantly elevated risk of miscarriage for working women who reported using VDTs for more than 20 hr per week during the first trimester of pregnancy compared to other working women who reported not using VDTs (odds ratio 1.8, 95% CI: 1.2-2.8). This risk could not be explained by age, education, occupation, smoking, alcohol consumption, or other maternal characteristics. No significantly elevated risk for birth defects was found among working women although odds ratios were 1.4 for both moderate and high VDT exposure, compared with no exposure (95% CI: 0.7-2.7 and 0.7-2.9, respectively). One possible explanation for these findings is that women who had adverse pregnancy outcomes may have overreported their exposures to VDTs and/or women with normal births may have underreported theirs. The findings may also be due to unmeasured factors confounded with high VDT use such as poor ergonomie conditions or job-related stress. That VDTs themselves are hazardous to the pregnant operator remains a possibility. Our results underscore the need for large cohort studies of working women that will provide objective measures of VDT exposures, ergonomic factors, and stress.

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