Joyce Molenaar

44 CHAPTER 2 REFERENCES 1. Barker DJ. The origins of the developmental origins theory. Journal of internal medicine. 2007;261(5):412-7. 2. Wadhwa PD, Buss C, Entringer S, Swanson JM, editors. Developmental origins of health and disease: brief history of the approach and current focus on epigenetic mechanisms. Seminars in reproductive medicine; 2009: NIH Public Access. 3. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine. Vibrant and Healthy Kids: Aligning Science, Practice, and Policy to Advance Health Equity. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press; 2019. 4. de Groot N, Bonsel GJ, Birnie E, Valentine NB. Towards a universal concept of vulnerability: broadening the evidence from the elderly to perinatal health using a Delphi approach. PLoS One. 2019;14(2):e0212633. 5. Colciago E, Merazzi B, Panzeri M, Fumagalli S, Nespoli A. Women’s vulnerability within the childbearing continuum: A scoping review. European Journal of Midwifery. 2020;4. 6. Grabovschi C, Loignon C, Fortin M. Mapping the concept of vulnerability related to health care disparities: a scoping review. BMC Health Serv Res. 2013;13(1):94. 7. Spini D, Bernardi L, Oris M. Toward a life course framework for studying vulnerability. Research in Human Development. 2017;14(1):5-25. 8. van der Meer L, Ernst H, Blanchette L, Steegers E. Een kwetsbare zwangere, wat is dat eigenlijk? [A vulnerable pregnant woman, what is that actually?]. Medisch Contact. 2020. 9. Knight M, Bunch K, Kenyon S, Tuffnell D, Kurinczuk JJ. A national population‐based cohort study to investigate inequalities in maternal mortality in the United Kingdom, 2009‐17. Paediatric and perinatal epidemiology. 2020;34(4):392-8. 10. Waelput AJ, Sijpkens MK, Lagendijk J, van Minde MR, Raat H, Ernst-Smelt HE, et al. Geographical differences in perinatal health and child welfare in the Netherlands: rationale for the healthy pregnancy 4 all-2 program. BMC pregnancy and childbirth. 2017;17(1):1-12. 11. Timmermans S, Bonsel GJ, Steegers-Theunissen RP, Mackenbach JP, Steyerberg EW, Raat H, et al. Individual accumulation of heterogeneous risks explains perinatal inequalities within deprived neighbourhoods. Eur J Epidemiol. 2011;26(2):165-80. 12. Harron K, Gilbert R, Fagg J, Guttmann A, van der Meulen J. Associations between pre-pregnancy psychosocial risk factors and infant outcomes: a population-based cohort study in England. The Lancet Public Health. 2021;6(2):e97-e105. 13. Raat H, Wijtzes A, Jaddoe VW, Moll HA, Hofman A, Mackenbach JP. The health impact of social disadvantage in early childhood; the Generation R study. Early human development. 2011;87(11):729-33. 14. Matijasevich A, Victora C, Lawlor D, Golding J, Menezes A, Araujo C, et al. Association of socioeconomic position with maternal pregnancy and infant health outcomes in birth cohort studies from Brazil and the UK. J Epidemiol Community Health. 2012;66(2):127-35. 15. World Health Organization. A Conceptual Framework for Action on the Social Determinants of Health. Geneva: WHO Document Production Services 2010. 16. Ministry of Health Welfare and Sport. Solid Start—The Action Programme. The Hague, 2020. Available from: https://www.rijksoverheid.nl/documenten/rapporten/2020/07/31/ solid-start-the-action-programme (November 2022, date last accessed). 17. Crone M, Luurssen-Masurel N, Bruinsma-van Zwicht B, van Lith J, Rijnders M. Pregnant women at increased risk of adverse perinatal outcomes: A combination of less healthy behaviors and adverse psychosocial and socio-economic circumstances. Prev Med. 2019;127:105817.

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