Using panel data to examine pregnancy attitudes over time

Journal Title: International Journal of Population Studies - Year 2015, Vol 1, Issue 1

Abstract

There is a lack of research examining changes in women’s fertility attitudes over relatively short periods of time. The aim of this study was to determine whether and how women’s attempts to get pregnant and their desire to avoid pregnancy changed over six months’ time as well as which characteristics and circumstances were associated with these changes. Using multinomial regression, we analyzed two panels of data from a sample of approximately 3,000 U.S. adult women gathered within six months apart. Only 4% of the women were trying to get pregnant at both time points, but six percent went from trying to not or vice versa. Two-thirds reported a strong desire to avoid pregnancy at both points, but 9% transitioned from strong to not strong and an additional 7% transitioned from not strong to strong. Women who transitioned to a more serious romantic relationship were at increased risk of transitioning to trying to become pregnant and, not surprisingly, to a weaker pregnancy avoidance. Some of the variables we tested, including changes in employment status and race/ethnicity, were associated with one outcome but not the other. The results highlight the importance of taking a holistic perspective of women’s lives when studying pregnancy intentions and in reproductive health care services such as contraceptive counseling. Context matters and it may change rapidly.

Authors and Affiliations

Heini Väisänen and Rachel K. Jones

Keywords

Related Articles

Changes in total and disability-free life expectancy among older adults in China: Do they portend a compression of morbidity?

The purpose of this research is to determine whether disability-free life expectancy (DFLE) in China has been increasing more rapidly than total life expectancy (TLE). Such a scenario would be consistent with a compressi...

Internal youth migration in Uganda: Analyzing associates and employment outcomes

Youth internal migration is seen as a solution to youth unemployment, and this has resulted in over urbanization and its associated negative effects such as congestion, pollution, unemployment, underemployment, and incre...

Four decades of transition to first marriage in China: Economic reform and persisting marriage norms

This study draws on three waves (2012, 2013, and 2015) of pooled data from the China General Social Survey to examine two major dimensions of the transition to first marriage among four cohorts of youths, i.e., the trans...

Challenges to the integration of Syrian refugees

In this study, we provide an overview of the situation of Syrian refugees and other non-citizens living in host countries. We explored the cases of several countries: Turkey, which is one of the main destinations for ref...

Finding a job in urban China: A comparative analysis of migrants and natives

Although migration scholars have demonstrated that migrant workers behave differently from locals when looking for jobs, past research in China’s urban labor market has presented puzzling results by showing that individu...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP678828
  • DOI -
  • Views 186
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Heini Väisänen and Rachel K. Jones (2015). Using panel data to examine pregnancy attitudes over time. International Journal of Population Studies, 1(1), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-678828