Investigating the Relationship between Teenage Childbearing and Psychological Distress Using Longitudinal Evidence

Author:

Mollborn Stefanie1,Morningstar Elizabeth2

Affiliation:

1. Stefanie Mollborn is an assistant professor of sociology and faculty in the Health and Society Program of the Institute of Behavioral Science at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Her research focuses on social psychological approaches to understanding health over the life course. Current projects include an analysis of the importance of resources for the early development of teenage parents' children and an examination of the antecedents and consequences of social norms about teen pregnancy.

2. Elizabeth Morningstar is a doctoral student in sociology at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Her research focuses on gender, families, and health. She is currently researching quality of life and service needs among leukemia and lymphoma survivors and plans to explore patients' and families' responses to antiretroviral treatments in sub-Saharan Africa.

Abstract

The high levels of depression among teenage mothers have received considerable research attention in smaller targeted samples, but a large-scale examination of the complex relationship between adolescent childbearing and psychological distress that explores bidirectional causality is needed. Using the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health) and the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Birth Cohort, we found that teenage mothers had higher levels of distress than their childless adolescent peers and adult mothers, but the experience of teenage childbearing did not appear to be the cause. Rather, teenage mothers' distress levels were already higher than their peers before they became pregnant, and they remained higher after childbearing and into early and middle adulthood. We also found that distress did not increase the likelihood of adolescent childbearing except among poor teenagers. In this group, experiencing high levels of distress markedly increased the probability of becoming a teenage mother. Among nonpoor teenage girls, the relationship between distress and subsequent teenage childbearing was spurious.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Social Psychology

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