Racial and ethnic differences in the transition to a teenage birth in the United States

Perspect Sex Reprod Health. 2013 Jun;45(2):89-100. doi: 10.1363/4508913. Epub 2013 May 7.

Abstract

Context: Rates of teenage childbearing are high in the United States, and they differ substantially by race and ethnicity and nativity status.

Methods: Data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 cohort were used to link characteristics of white, black, U.S.-born Hispanic and foreign-born Hispanic adolescents to teenage childbearing. Following a sample of 3,294 females aged 12-16 through age 19, discrete-time logistic regression analyses were used to examine which domains of teenagers' lives were associated with the transition to a teenage birth for each racial and ethnic group, and whether these associations help explain racial and ethnic and nativity differences in this transition.

Results: In a baseline multivariate analysis controlling for age, compared with whites, foreign-born Hispanics had more than three times the odds of a teenage birth (odds ratio, 3.5), while blacks and native-born Hispanics had about twice the odds (2.1 and 1.9, respectively). Additional controls (for family environments; individual, peer and dating characteristics; characteristics of first sexual relationships; and subsequent sexual experience) reduced the difference between blacks and whites, and between foreign-born Hispanics and whites, and eliminated the difference between U.S.-born Hispanics and whites. Further, if racial or ethnic minority adolescents had the same distribution as did white teenagers across all characteristics, the predicted probability of a teenage birth would be reduced by 40% for blacks and 35% for U.S.-born Hispanics.

Conclusions: Differences in the context of adolescence may account for a substantial portion of racial, ethnic and nativity differences in teenage childbearing.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Black or African American / statistics & numerical data*
  • Child
  • Cohort Studies
  • Female
  • Hispanic or Latino / statistics & numerical data*
  • Humans
  • Logistic Models
  • Multivariate Analysis
  • Parturition / ethnology*
  • Pregnancy
  • Pregnancy in Adolescence / ethnology*
  • United States / epidemiology
  • White People / statistics & numerical data*
  • Young Adult