Literature DB >> 24203445

What teen mothers know.

A T Geronimus1.   

Abstract

In the United States, low-income or minority populations tend toward earlier births than the more advantaged. In disadvantaged populations, one factor that may exert pressure toward early births is "weathering," or pervasive health uncertainty. Are subjective perceptions of health related to fertility timing? Drawing on a small sample of intensive interviews with teenage mothers-to-be, I suggest that low-income African American teenagers may expect uncertain health and short lifespans. Where family economies and caretaking systems are based on kin networks, such perceptions may influence the decision to become a young mother. Heuristic typologies of ways socially situated knowledge may contribute to the reproduction of fertility timing practices contrast the experiences of poor African American interviewees, working class white interviewees, and middle-class teens who typically postpone childbearing.

Year:  1996        PMID: 24203445     DOI: 10.1007/BF02732898

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Nat        ISSN: 1045-6767


  12 in total

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2.  Age, socioeconomic status, and health.

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Review 3.  Childhood experience, interpersonal development, and reproductive strategy: and evolutionary theory of socialization.

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5.  Prevalence of diagnosed diabetes, undiagnosed diabetes, and impaired glucose tolerance in adults 20-74 years of age.

Authors:  W C Hadden; M I Harris
Journal:  Vital Health Stat 11       Date:  1987-02

Review 6.  Socioeconomic status and health. The challenge of the gradient.

Authors:  N E Adler; T Boyce; M A Chesney; S Cohen; S Folkman; R L Kahn; S L Syme
Journal:  Am Psychol       Date:  1994-01

7.  Black/white differences in the relationship of maternal age to birthweight: a population-based test of the weathering hypothesis.

Authors:  A T Geronimus
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  1996-02       Impact factor: 4.634

8.  Sisters, siblings, and mothers: the effect of teen-age childbearing on birth outcomes in a dynamic family context.

Authors:  M R Rosenzweig; K I Wolpin
Journal:  Econometrica       Date:  1995-03       Impact factor: 5.844

9.  Increasing prevalence of overweight among US adults. The National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys, 1960 to 1991.

Authors:  R J Kuczmarski; K M Flegal; S M Campbell; C L Johnson
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10.  Trends in the prevalence, awareness, treatment, and control of hypertension in the adult US population. Data from the health examination surveys, 1960 to 1991.

Authors:  V L Burt; J A Cutler; M Higgins; M J Horan; D Labarthe; P Whelton; C Brown; E J Roccella
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  1995-07       Impact factor: 10.190

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  23 in total

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6.  Do high-status people really have fewer children? : Education, income, and fertility in the contemporary U.S.

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7.  Violence, teenage pregnancy, and life history : ecological factors and their impact on strategy-driven behavior.

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9.  Maternal upward socioeconomic mobility and black-white disparities in infant birthweight.

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10.  Development of social variation in reproductive schedules: a study from an English urban area.

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