Abstract
The success of black or white mothers in obtaining adequate prenatal care is examined. Two departures from public health convention are employed. The independent variables’ marginal effects are calculated from their logit coefficients. The odds ratio of care adequacy between races is derived from race-specific regressions. It yields a smaller variance and type II decision error likelihood compared to the race dummy method. A working-class life outlook and apathetic fathers are the highest barriers to adequate care. Wantedness, in the form of desired timing, is a very strong motivator. Improving upward socioeconomic mobility and paternal attitudes are important aspects of increasing prenatal care adequacy rates.
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Cultural Studies
Cited by
2 articles.
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