Pleased to be pregnant? Positive pregnancy attitudes among sexually active adolescent females in the United States
- PMID: 24656702
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jpag.2013.10.005
Pleased to be pregnant? Positive pregnancy attitudes among sexually active adolescent females in the United States
Abstract
Study objective: To identify factors associated with a positive pregnancy attitude among sexually active US teen females.
Design: Secondary database analysis of the National Survey of Family Growth.
Participants: Adolescent females 15-19 years old.
Setting: Nationally representative sample.
Methods: Bivariate and multivariable analyses were performed of the 2002 and 2006-08 cycles to examine whether sociodemographic factors, contraceptive history, sexual education and behavior history, medical services history, and family and sexual attitudes were associated with a positive pregnancy attitude among sexually active teen females.
Results: Among the 975 sexually active US adolescent females surveyed, 15% reported a positive pregnancy attitude. Compared with adolescent females with a negative pregnancy attitude, those females with a positive pregnancy attitude were significantly (P < .05) more likely to have public insurance (43% vs 20%), to be poor (33% vs 10%), to have reached menarche at an earlier age (12 years old vs 13 years old), ever have HIV tested (35% vs 23%), but less likely to have ever been forced to have sex (1% vs 10%). In multivariable analyses, Latino race/ethnicity was associated with triple the odds, and African-American double the odds, of a positive pregnancy attitude. Older age of menarche and higher family income were associated with reduced odds of a positive pregnancy attitude.
Conclusions: One in 7 sexually active US adolescent females had a positive pregnancy attitude. Minority race/ethnicity was associated with greater odds of a positive pregnancy attitude, whereas older age of menarche and a higher family income were associated with lower odds of a positive pregnancy attitude. Assessing pregnancy attitudes for these groups of adolescent females might prove useful to decrease adolescent pregnancy rates.
Keywords: Adolescent pregnancy; Attitudes; Risk factors; Secondary database analysis.
Copyright © 2014 North American Society for Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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