{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Divergences in sex ratio at birth in US Census Regions due to racial factors: chronic stress and female foeticide. {Author}: Grech V; {Journal}: Public Health {Volume}: 221 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 2023 Aug 18 {Factor}: 4.984 {DOI}: 10.1016/j.puhe.2023.06.025 {Abstract}: OBJECTIVE: The sex ratio of live births (males/total [M/T]) approximates 0.515. Many factors reduce M/T, and these include stress. Antenatal sexing is used for female foeticide in the setting of male offspring preference. Regional differences and latitude gradients in M/T also occur. This study analysed M/T in the US by Census Regions.
METHODS: This was an ecological study.
METHODS: Live births by sex, Census region, state and mother's race were obtained from CDC Wonder (2007-2020).
RESULTS: There were 55,453,437 births (M/T 0.5116, 95% confidence interval: 0.5115-0.5118). M/T was Black/African American < Indian/Alaska Native American < White < Asian (P<<0.0001). M/T was significantly lowest in South and highest in West. The South had the lowest proportion of Asian/Pacific Islander births (3.9%) and the highest proportion of Black/African American (21.9%). West has the highest proportion of Asian/Pacific Islander (11.2%) and the lowest proportion of Black/African American births (5.3%). In Asian/Pacific Islander births, M/T significantly rose to third order and fell to sixth order births, unlike the other races that showed a decline from the first order.
CONCLUSIONS: Asian M/T may be elevated because of male offspring preference and selective female foeticide. M/T may be depressed in Black and American Indian/Alaskan births due to chronic stress, as race remains the most important factor associated with wealth inequality in the United States. The lower M/T of these two races when compared with White equates to a constant loss of 4.13 and 2.55/1000 male births. The higher Asian M implies a chronic loss of 3.78 females per 1000 births. Both have public health implications.