The odds of having a premature baby rises as the mother's height decreases, according to researchers from Uppsala University in Sweden and University of Auckland in New Zealand.
Among short mothers (155 centimetres tall or shorter), 9.4 per cent of babies were born premature (at less than 37 weeks of gestation), and 1.1 per cent very premature (less than 32 weeks of gestation), researchers said.
For tall mothers (179 centimetres or taller), these figures were 4.7 per cent and 0.5 per cent respectively, they said.
Premature birth is a major case of newborn death worldwide, and is linked to serious health problems in the short and long term.
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"Around half of all premature births are 'spontaneous', apparently with complex and often unknown causes," said Jose Derraik from University of Auckland.
"Based on the mounting evidence, maternal height is one of the factors that needs to be considered when evaluating a woman's risk of delivering a premature baby," said Derraik.
The study adds to a body of evidence suggesting the shorter the mother, the higher the odds of giving birth early.
"Short mothers tend to have less space for the babies to grow before birth, and this seems to lead to premature delivery in some women," he said.
The findings were published in the journal PLOS ONE.