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Research Network Working Paper, 434. Teenage childbearing in Latin American countries / Carmen Elisa Florez
Título de serie: Research Network Working Paper, 434 Título : Teenage childbearing in Latin American countries Tipo de documento: texto impreso Autores: Carmen Elisa Florez ; Jairo Núñez Méndez Editorial: Washington : Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo Fecha de publicación: 2001 Número de páginas: 97 p Idioma : Inglés Temas: AMERICA LATINA
ASPECTOS ECONOMICOS
ASPECTOS SOCIALES
BANCO INTERAMERICANO DE DESARROLLO
EMBARAZO EN ADOLESCENCIAClasificación: 338.9 Resumen: In spite of the rapid fertility transition experienced by most Latin American and Caribbean countries, teenage fertility has not changed at the same pace or in the same direction. Given that early childbearing is deleterious for both mother and child, we describe differentials in the levels and trends in teenage childbearing and analyze its proximate and socioeconomic determinants. We used Demographic and Health Surveys data from six LAC countries for which data are available for the second half of the 1990s: Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Guatemala, Dominican Republic and Peru. Teenage fertility trends indicate different patterns of change across countries by area of residence. However, in most countries teenage fertility has increased in rural areas but declined or remained constant in urban areas. Different contributions of marriage, proper use of family planning methods, and premarital births to teenage fertility behavior are reflected in differentials in unmarried parenthood across countries. Socioeconomic determinants are analyzed through simple logit model, multilevel analysis, and continuous-time hazard rate models. These analyses improve on prior research on LAC countries by including contextual/regional factors, isolating the effects into differentials in sexual activity and rates of childbearing, and by comparing the socioeconomic determinants of the timing of first birth and premarital birth. This research demonstrates that the effect of socioeconomic variables on the rate of childbearing can act through the timing of initial sexual intercourse (such as education, socioeconomic conditions of the households and area or residence) or through the timing of first birth (such as socialization in a female-headed family, availability - cceptability - use of family planning, and regional - country conditions, such as cultural and inherent characteristics). En línea: http://idbdocs.iadb.org/wsdocs/getdocument.aspx?docnum=788039 Enlace permanente a este registro: https://opac.um.edu.uy/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=73031 Research Network Working Paper, 434. Teenage childbearing in Latin American countries [texto impreso] / Carmen Elisa Florez ; Jairo Núñez Méndez . - Washington : Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo, 2001 . - 97 p.
Idioma : Inglés
Temas: AMERICA LATINA
ASPECTOS ECONOMICOS
ASPECTOS SOCIALES
BANCO INTERAMERICANO DE DESARROLLO
EMBARAZO EN ADOLESCENCIAClasificación: 338.9 Resumen: In spite of the rapid fertility transition experienced by most Latin American and Caribbean countries, teenage fertility has not changed at the same pace or in the same direction. Given that early childbearing is deleterious for both mother and child, we describe differentials in the levels and trends in teenage childbearing and analyze its proximate and socioeconomic determinants. We used Demographic and Health Surveys data from six LAC countries for which data are available for the second half of the 1990s: Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Guatemala, Dominican Republic and Peru. Teenage fertility trends indicate different patterns of change across countries by area of residence. However, in most countries teenage fertility has increased in rural areas but declined or remained constant in urban areas. Different contributions of marriage, proper use of family planning methods, and premarital births to teenage fertility behavior are reflected in differentials in unmarried parenthood across countries. Socioeconomic determinants are analyzed through simple logit model, multilevel analysis, and continuous-time hazard rate models. These analyses improve on prior research on LAC countries by including contextual/regional factors, isolating the effects into differentials in sexual activity and rates of childbearing, and by comparing the socioeconomic determinants of the timing of first birth and premarital birth. This research demonstrates that the effect of socioeconomic variables on the rate of childbearing can act through the timing of initial sexual intercourse (such as education, socioeconomic conditions of the households and area or residence) or through the timing of first birth (such as socialization in a female-headed family, availability - cceptability - use of family planning, and regional - country conditions, such as cultural and inherent characteristics). En línea: http://idbdocs.iadb.org/wsdocs/getdocument.aspx?docnum=788039 Enlace permanente a este registro: https://opac.um.edu.uy/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=73031 Reserva
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Inventario Ubicación en el estante Tipo de medio Sección Ubicación Estado 038429 338.9 RES v.434 Libro Colección Biblioteca Central Disponible