PMID: 3752324Oct 1, 1986Paper

Do the sisters of childbearing teenagers have increased rates of childbearing?

American Journal of Public Health
A FriedeH Arrighi

Abstract

In 1983, 89,000 children were born to United States women aged less than or equal to 16. To reduce teenage fertility rates, public health workers will need to identify teenagers at elevated risk for childbearing. We tested the hypothesis that the sisters of childbearing teenagers may form such a group. We performed an historical cohort study of 3,767 teenagers aged 12-16 years who were enrolled in Arkansas Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), 1978-81; they had 247 pregnancies. Multivariable log-linear hazard models were used to control and study age, race, number of AFDC-eligibles per household, and county urbanization and family planning services. Teenagers whose sisters bore children had elevated rate ratios (RR) for childbearing (RR = 1.8; 95% Confidence Limits [CL] = 1.2-2.6), as did Blacks (RR = 3.1; 95% CL = 2.0-4.8), and members of households with more than nine AFDC-eligibles (RR = 1.7; 95% CL = 1.1-2.6). Because they may have elevated childbearing rates, and would be easy to contact, the sisters of pregnant teenagers could form an important target population for family planning efforts.

References

Aug 1, 1981·American Journal of Public Health·N M Morris
Jun 1, 1977·Journal of Youth and Adolescence·J L GoldfarbC Schum

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Citations

Feb 15, 2001·Journal of Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology·C Stevens-Simon
Sep 1, 1992·The Journal of School Health·J S Santelli, P Beilenson
Mar 28, 2001·Developmental Psychology·P L East, L J Jacobson
Jun 15, 2007·Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health·Patricia L EastEmily J Horn
May 14, 2016·Journal of Child and Family Studies·Sara NicholsGeri Donenberg

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