Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
140162 The Social Science Journal 2013 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Smoking and background SES account for disparities in birth outcomes among U.S. white teen mothers.•African American teen mothers exhibit no increased risk of LBW relative to their older counterparts.•Foreign and U.S.-born Hispanic mothers in the U.S. exhibit age patterns in LBW prevalence more resembling that of white mothers.

This study considers how low birth weight (LBW) prevalence varies by race/ethnicity and maternal age and explores mechanisms that explain disparities. Results show that maternal age patterns in LBW risk for African Americans differ from Whites and foreign- and U.S.-born Hispanics. Background socioeconomic disadvantage, together with current socioeconomic status and smoking during pregnancy, explain almost all of the LBW disparity between white teenage mothers and their older counterparts. These findings suggest that social disadvantage is a primary driver in unfavorable birth outcomes among white teenage mothers compared to older white mothers. Alternatively, background disadvantage and other social characteristics explain very little of the LBW disparities among African Americans and U.S.- and foreign-born Hispanics. Overall, these results indicate LBW disparities by maternal age are a complex product of socioeconomic disadvantage and current social and behavioral factors, such that LBW risk does not operate uniformly by race/ethnicity or maternal age.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Social Psychology
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