Trajectories of unintended fertility

Citation

Rajan, Sowmya; Morgan, S. Philip; Harris, Kathleen Mullan; Guilkey, David; Hayford, Sarah R.; & Guzzo, Karen Benjamin (2017). Trajectories of unintended fertility. Population Research and Policy Review. vol. 36 (6) pp. 903-928

Abstract

Having an unintended birth is strongly associated with the likelihood of having later unintended births. We use detailed longitudinal data from the Add Health Study (N = 8300) to investigate whether a host of measured sociodemographic, personality, and psychosocial characteristics select women into this “trajectory” of unintended childbearing. While some measured characteristics and aspects of the unfolding life course are related to unintended childbearing, explicitly modeling these effects does not greatly attenuate the association of an unintended birth with a subsequent one. Next, we statistically control for unmeasured time-invariant covariates that affect all birth intervals, and again find that the association of an unintended birth with subsequent ones remains strong. This persistent, strong association may be the direct result of experiencing an earlier unintended birth. We propose several mechanisms that might explain this strong association.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1007/s11113-017-9443-3

Keyword(s)

Unintended fertility

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Population Research and Policy Review

Author(s)

Rajan, Sowmya
Morgan, S. Philip
Harris, Kathleen Mullan
Guilkey, David
Hayford, Sarah R.
Guzzo, Karen Benjamin

Year Published

2017

Volume Number

36

Issue Number

6

Pages

903-928

Edition

September 27, 2017

ISSN/ISBN

1573-7829

DOI

10.1007/s11113-017-9443-3

NIHMSID

NIHMS909421

Reference ID

6864