Child disability and mothers' tubal sterilization

被引:2
|
作者
Park, JM [1 ]
Hogan, DP [1 ]
Goldscheider, FK [1 ]
机构
[1] Brown Univ, Dept Sociol, Providence, RI 02912 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1363/3513803
中图分类号
C921 [人口统计学];
学科分类号
摘要
CONTEXT: The needs of children with disability can be substantial, leading some parents to consider contraceptive sterilization to prevent additional births. METHODS: Matched records from the 1993 National Health Interview Survey and the 1995 National Survey of Family Growth were used to investigate the relationship between child disability and mothers' sterilization. Data included the birth records of 8,711 children, information on older children in the household, and the mothers' background and reproductive characteristics. Logistic and Cox regression models were used to estimate the effect of the birth of a child with a disability on the risk of mothers' sterilization. RESULTS: The birth of a child with disability has no effect on the likelihood that a mother will undergo sterilization within the next month, however, women who have on older child with severe disability are more likely than those whose older children are nondisabled to undergo sterilization within a month after the birth of another child (odds ratio, 2.6). Severe disability in a newborn significantly increases the risk of sterilization 1-36 months after birth (risk ratio, 1.7), severe disability among older children also appears to increase the risk of sterilization 1-36 months after birth (1.5), although this result was only marginally significant. CONCLUSIONS: Women often respond to the birth of children with disabilities by changing their fertility plans, although usually not immediately unless they have older children with severe disability. These findings are consistent with parents' desire to have a nondisabled child and with their need to care for an exceptional child by forgoing additional births.
引用
收藏
页码:138 / 143
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] MINILAPAROTOMY TUBAL STERILIZATION
    SANDMIRE, HF
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY, 1978, 131 (04) : 453 - 459
  • [22] LAPAROSCOPIC TUBAL STERILIZATION
    PETERSON, EP
    BEHRMAN, SJ
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY, 1971, 110 (01) : 24 - &
  • [23] Controversies in tubal sterilization
    Chene, G.
    Lamblin, G.
    GYNECOLOGIE OBSTETRIQUE & FERTILITE, 2016, 44 (10): : 539 - 540
  • [24] TUBAL PREGNANCY AFTER TUBAL-STERILIZATION
    NEESER, E
    HIRSCH, HA
    GEBURTSHILFE UND FRAUENHEILKUNDE, 1985, 45 (10) : 702 - 705
  • [25] Tubal anastomosis after tubal sterilization: a review
    Xavier Deffieux
    Michèle Morin Surroca
    Erika Faivre
    Frédérique Pages
    Hervé Fernandez
    Amélie Gervaise
    Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics, 2011, 283 : 1149 - 1158
  • [26] Tubal anastomosis after tubal sterilization: a review
    Deffieux, Xavier
    Surroca, Michele Morin
    Faivre, Erika
    Pages, Frederique
    Fernandez, Herve
    Gervaise, Amelie
    ARCHIVES OF GYNECOLOGY AND OBSTETRICS, 2011, 283 (05) : 1149 - 1158
  • [27] PROBLEMS OF MOTHERS RAISING A CHILD WITH INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY
    Tomczyszyn, Dorota
    HEALTH PROBLEMS OF CIVILIZATION, 2019, 13 (04) : 254 - 263
  • [28] CHOOSING A STERILIZATION PROCEDURE - LAPAROSCOPIC TUBAL STERILIZATION
    YUZPE, AA
    JOURNAL OF REPRODUCTIVE MEDICINE, 1975, 15 (03) : 119 - 122
  • [29] Having another child without intellectual disabilities: Comparing mothers of a single child with disability and mothers of multiple children with and without disability
    Kimura, Miyako
    Yamazaki, Yoshihiko
    JOURNAL OF INTELLECTUAL DISABILITIES, 2019, 23 (02) : 216 - 232
  • [30] Mothers' perceptions of child care assistance: The impact of a child's disability
    Crowe, TK
    VanLeit, B
    Berghmans, KK
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY, 2000, 54 (01): : 52 - 58