Casey and her colleagues found convincingly stark racial disparities. The mean monthly incidence of preterm birth rose 16.7 percent beyond what was expected for Black mothers six months after the heat wave. No such link was seen in non-Hispanic white births.
Heat waves increase the number of risky, premature births
Extreme heat is dangerous when you're pregnant — particularly for those in underrepresented communities.
Further, a study conducted in Harris County, Texas, which includes Houston, the fourth-largest US city, found that the risk of preterm birth was 15 percent higher following extremely hot days and had the greatest impact on communities of color that lived in neighborhoods with more concrete than trees.
That finding points to the reasons behind the racial gap in preterm births linked to heat waves. Preterm birth has been linked to a number of factors including inadequate nutrition, exposure to air pollution, lack of access to quality health care, lack of air conditioning, or having a job working outdoors, or several of these at once. Heat only worsens existing risks.