Resolved Parental Infertility and Children’s Educational Achievement

Author:

Branigan Amelia R.1,Helgertz Jonas2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology, University of Illinois at Chicago, 4175 Behavioral Sciences Building, 1007 West Harrison Street (MC 312), Chicago, IL 60607, USA

2. Centre for Economic Demography and Department of Economic History, Lund University, Lund, Sweden

Abstract

Abstract Although difficulty conceiving a child has long been a major medical and social preoccupation, it has not been considered as a predictor of long-term outcomes in children ultimately conceived. This is consistent with a broader gap in knowledge regarding the consequences of parental health for educational performance in offspring. Here we address that omission, asking how resolved parental infertility relates to children’s academic achievement. In a sample of all Swedish births between 1988 and 1995, we find that involuntary childlessness prior to either a first or a second birth is associated with lower academic achievement (both test scores and GPA) in children at age 16, even if the period of infertility was prior to a sibling’s birth rather than the child’s own. Our results support a conceptualization of infertility as a cumulative physical and social experience with effects extending well beyond the point at which a child is born, and emphasize the need to better understand how specific parental health conditions constrain children’s educational outcomes.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Demography

Reference40 articles.

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2. Is infertility really associated with higher levels of mental distress in the female population? Results from the North-Trøndelag Health Study and the Medical Birth Registry of Norway;Biringer;Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics and Gynecology,2015

3. Maternal depression and child development;Canadian Paediatric Society;Paediatrics & Child Health,2004

4. The early days of IVF outside the UK;Cohen;Human Reproduction Update,2005

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