# The incidence, characteristics, and complications of pregnant women who delivered stillbirths under different child policies in central China

**Authors:** Lili Xiong, Donghua Xie, Qingyun Jiang, Junqun Fang

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1635120 · Frontiers in Public Health · 2025-10-07

## TL;DR

This study examines how China's changing fertility policies from one-child to three-child affected stillbirth rates and risk factors among pregnant women in central China.

## Contribution

The study identifies specific risk factors for stillbirth and shows how these risks evolved with policy changes, particularly highlighting age and socioeconomic factors.

## Key findings

- Stillbirth rates declined significantly from 9.62‰ under the one-child policy to 5.73‰ under the three-child policy.
- Key risk factors included maternal age <24 years, multiparity, non-rural hospital delivery, and comorbidities like severe preeclampsia and placental abruption.
- Prenatal diabetes was paradoxically associated with reduced stillbirth risk.

## Abstract

China’s evolving fertility policies (one-child to three-child) have shaped maternal and neonatal outcomes, but specific gaps in stillbirth epidemiology during policy transitions.

This retrospective cohort study analyzed 721,860 singleton pregnancies in 2011–2023, from 18 maternal near-miss surveillance hospitals in Hunan. Stillbirth rates were assessed across four policy periods: one-child (2011–2013), partial two-child (2013–2015), universal two-child (2016–2020), and three-child (2021–2023). Multivariable logistic regression identified risk factors, adjusting for fertility policy period, maternal demographics and maternal comorbidities. Trends over time were analyzed using segmented regression models.

The overall stillbirth rate was 7.02‰ (95% confidence interval [CI]: 6.82–7.21), declining significantly from 9.62‰ during the one-child policy to 5.73‰ (95%CI: 5.25–6.23) under the three-child policy (t = −4.22, p < 0.01). Key risk factors included maternal age < 24 years (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 1.77, 95%CI:1.63–1.92), multiparity (aOR = 1.27–2.82. p < 0.01), non-rural hospital delivery (aOR = 4.00–11.13, p < 0.01), education ≤9 years (aOR = 1.51–2.20, p < 0.01), not being married (aOR = 2.92–5.60, p < 0.01), and comorbidities: severe preeclampsia (aOR = 3.80, 95%CI: 3.36–4.29), chronic hypertension (aOR = 2.67, 95%CI: 2.09–3.37), placental abruption (aOR = 5.06, 95%CI: 4.11–6.16), and placenta previa (aOR = 1.55, 95%CI: 1.29–1.84). Paradoxically, prenatal diabetes was associated with reduced stillbirth risk (aOR = 0.86, 95%CI: 0.77–0.95). Temporal shifts revealed elevated stillbirth rates among advanced-age mothers pre-2016 versus rising rates in women <24 years post-policy liberalization. Only the partial two-child policy period (aOR = 1.15, 95%CI: 1.05–1.25) was associated with the risk of stillbirth.

China’s fertility policy transitions correlate with dynamic stillbirth epidemiology, emphasizing age- and parity-specific vulnerabilities. Targeted interventions for high-risk subgroups, especially younger, less well-educated, multiparous women, and those with hypertensive or placental disorders, are critical amid ongoing implementation of the three-child policy.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** severe preeclampsia (MONDO:0001641), placental abruption (MONDO:0004846), placenta previa (MONDO:0005918)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** diabetes (MESH:D003920), placental abruption (MESH:D000037), placental disorders (MESH:D010922), preeclampsia (MESH:D011225), placenta previa (MESH:D010923), Stillbirth (MESH:D050497), hypertension (MESH:D006973)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

51 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12537710/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12537710