1 / 29

Sex, Contraception and Abortion

Sex, Contraception and Abortion. ……… in the executive boardroom????. Cohort overview What is available - some similarities and differences Take care when ……….. Research examples. NLSY79. 14-22 in 1979 Annual surveys 1979-94; biennial through 2006

ordell
Download Presentation

Sex, Contraception and Abortion

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sex, Contraception and Abortion ……… in the executive boardroom????

  2. Cohort overview • What is available - some similarities and differences • Take care when ……….. • Research examples

  3. NLSY79 • 14-22 in 1979 • Annual surveys 1979-94; biennial through 2006 • 22 survey points covering ~100% of female childbearing • Age in 2006: 41-49

  4. NLSY97 • 12-17 in 1997 • Annual surveys 1997-07 • Most recent available data: 2004/05 (R8) • Age in R8: 19-24

  5. NLSY79 Young Adults • 15 and over • Biennial surveys 1994-2006 • Age in 2006: 14 (will be 15 by end of calendar year) – 35 (1 respondent) • N in 2006: 5844 and #s growing! • Age of mothers of these young adults

  6. Following Youth through Later Adolescence/Early Adulthood NLSY79 14-16 (1979) → 24-26 (1989) 10 years NLSY-YA 14-16 (1994+) → 24-26 (2004+) 10 years NLSY97 14-16 (1996) → 22-24 (2004) 8

  7. What is available?

  8. Abortion • 1979 – asks about outcome of each pregnancy not ending in live birth (SB MC AB). Beginning in 1992, only collected end data of first non-live birth sli but not outcome. Dates of all abortions are collected year by year. • 1997 – asks about outcome of each pregnancy not ending in live birth (SB MC AB) -- ties to pregancy + self reported • Young Adults – all direct questions re: abortion and pregnancies not ending in LB dropped in 2000 • Mode of asking questions makes real difference to quality of data – 2000 moved to telephone (Young Adults).

  9. 1979 • Ever had sex (1983, 1984, 1985) – NB youngest person =18 in 1983. Once answered yes, not asked again. Those responding “yes” asked age at first intercourse. • Had sex in past month? + # of times • Do you use birth control? If yes, what methods? Frequency of method use (always, sometimes, almost never). Methods used in past month (from list). Asked annually 1982-1986 then biennially.

  10. 1997 • Ever had sex* • Age at first sex* • Use of contraception at first sex* • # of sex partners* • In past 12 months - # sex partners, # times had sex, # times used bc, bc method used most often (9 choices)* • Information about partner etc. at first sex (R4 onwards) (age, race/ethnicity, education of partner, location, relationship status etc. ) • Frequency of sex since last interview • Abortions and miscarriages (14+ girls R1, updates M and F R2 onwards) • Birth control use at time of last pregnancy • *Asked 14+ R1 and R2 and then everyone R3 onwards

  11. 1997 – R1 Have you ever had sexual intercourse, that is made love, had sex, or gone all the way with a person of the opposite sex? 1 yes 2 no Valid skip = 3577 (who are these valid skips?)

  12. Young Adults • Age at first sex (asked of children 13+) • Number of partners • How long ago last had sex • Used birth control last sex • Type of birth control used • Relationship, age and cohabitation status of most recent sexual partner (since 1998) • ever become pregnant and type of birth control used when became pregnant (females)

  13. Determinants of early sex? • Which cohorts might you want to use? • What is the research question? • Pros and cons of each data set

  14. Be careful what you wish for!(Young Adults)Age at first sexRespondent ID 1994 1996 1998104 -7 -7 14166 12 12 12198 13 12 13251 -7 15 15277 13 12 14304 -7 14 -7** never had sex

  15. Teen birth rates declined significantly since peak in 1991 Abortion rates among teens have also dropped Approximately 25% of decline in teen birth rate due to increased abstinence, 75% due to changes in behavior of sexually experienced Teens today more likely to use contraceptives when they first have sex.

  16. Despite declines American teens still have higher pregnancy rates than teens in other Western industrialized countries American teens also have higher rates of sexually transmitted infections than teenagers in other developed countries : 1 in 4 teens acquire an STI each year Girls > boys Why?

  17. How might dating relationships be associated with adolescent sexual initiation? • Does this association differ for males and females and/or by race?

  18. Percentage of adolescents who had sex between ages 11-12 and 15-16 who reported……. All Male Female Black Non-black Dating < first sex 49.7 59.2* 42.2 27.5* 58.0 Dating = first sex 38.2 33.0* 42.3 49.1* 34.1 Sex < dating 12.1 7.8* 15.5 23.4 7.8 N=564

  19. Is there a relationship between family processes and the likelihood of an adolescent being sexually active prior to age 17? Is there a relationship between family processes and contraceptive use at first sex for those adolescents who are sexually active prior to age 17?

  20. Sample in 1997: Ages 12 and 13 Virgins Lived with mother N=2,607

  21. Supportiveness of mother: Very supportive Somewhat supportive Not very supportive Is mother permissive or strict? Uninvolved = somewhat supportive/not very supportive + permissive (10%) Authoritarian = somewhat supportive/not very supportive + strict (13%) Permissive = very supportive + permissive (32%) Authoritative = very supportive + strict (45%)

  22. Mother-Child Relationship. 1) I think highly of my mother 2) She is a person I want to be like 3) I really enjoy spending time with her. (Answer choices: strongly disagree, disagree, neutral, agree, strongly agree). 4) How often does she praise you for doing well? 5) How often does she criticize you or your ideas? (reverse coded) 6) How often does she help you do things that are important to you? 7) How often does she blame you for her problems? (reverse coded) 8) How often does she make plans with you and cancel for no good reason? (reverse coded) (Answer choices: never, rarely, sometimes, usually, always).

  23. In a typical week, how many days from 0-7 do you eat dinner with your family? does housework get done when it is supposed to? do you do something fun as a family? do you do something religious as a family?

  24. How much does she know about… 1) your close friends, that is who they are? 2) your close friends’ parents, that is who they are? 3) who you are with when you are not at home? 4) who your teachers are and what you are doing in school? (Answer choices: (0) knows nothing, (1) knows just a little,(2) knows some things, (3) knows most things, (4) knows everything). Range = 0-16 with higher scores indicating higher levels of maternal monitoring.

  25. Who sets limits on: how late the adolescent can stay out, who they can hang out with what kinds of TV and movies they are allowed to view. The scale ranges from 0 (youth sets all limits) to 6 (mother sets all limits).

  26. Family structure Gender Race/ethnicity Parental education Urban versus Rural residence Residence in Metropolitan area Fundamentalist religion

  27. Sexual Intercourse Prior to Age 17 SignificanceOdds ratio Uninvolved NS (+++) Permissive NS (NS) Authoritarian + (+++) 1.35 Relationship with M NS (- - -) C turns to parent(s) - - - (- - -) 0.73 Family routines NS (- - -) M monitors - (- - -) 0.97 Setting Limits - - - (- - -) 0.89 Lived with stepparent NS (+++) Single mother +++ (+++) 2.09 Lived with other adult +++ (+++) 2.04 Note: race/ethnicity, parental education, metropolitan, fundamentalist and sex of child also included in analyses. +/- p<.05 ++/-- p<.01 +++/--- p<.001

  28. Use of Contraception at First Sexual Intercourse Prior to Age 17 SignificanceOdds ratio Uninvolved NS (NS) Permissive NS (NS) Authoritarian NS (NS) Relationship with M NS (+) C turns to parent(s) NS (NS) Family routines NS (NS) M monitors NS (+) Setting Limits NS (NS) Lived with stepparent NS (NS) Single mother NS (NS) Lived with other adult NS (NS) Note: race/ethnicity, parental education, metropolitan, fundamentalist and sex of child also included in analyses. +/- p<.05 ++/-- p<.01 +++/--- p<.001

  29. Use of Contraception at First Sexual Intercourse Prior to Age 17 Used ContraceptionUsed Condom Black + +++ Hispanic NS NS Fundamentalist Religion - - - - +/- p<.05 ++/-- p<.01 +++/--- p<.001

More Related