Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2892333483> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2892333483 endingPage "1053" @default.
- W2892333483 startingPage "1053" @default.
- W2892333483 abstract "<h3>Importance</h3> Evidence indicates that there are potential health, development, and maternal bonding consequences for children born from unwanted pregnancies. <h3>Objective</h3> To examine the association of women receiving or being denied a wanted abortion with their children’s health and well-being. <h3>Design, Setting, and Participants</h3> A 5-year longitudinal observational study with a quasi-experimental design conducted between January 18, 2008, and January 25, 2016, examined women who received abortions just under the gestational age limit of 30 abortion facilities across the United States and women who were denied abortion just beyond the gestational age limit in these facilities. Analyses compared the children of 146 women who were denied an abortion (index children) with children born to 182 women who received an abortion and had a subsequent child within 5 years (subsequent children). Interview-to-interview retention averaged 94.5% (6895 of 7293) across the 11 semi-annual interviews. <h3>Exposures</h3> Being born after denial of abortion vs after a new pregnancy subsequent to an abortion. <h3>Main Outcomes and Measures</h3> Perinatal outcomes and child health, child development, maternal bonding, socioeconomics, and household structure. <h3>Results</h3> This study included 328 women who had children during the study period (mean [SD] age at study recruitment, 23.7 [4.9] years). There were no differences by study group in consent to participate in the study, completion of first interview, or continuation in the study. Among the 328 children in the study (146 index children and 182 subsequent children), there were 163 girls and 165 boys. Perinatal and child health outcomes were not different between subsequent and index children, and there was no clear pattern of delayed child development. However, mixed-effects models adjusting for clustered recruitment and multiple observations per child revealed that poor maternal bonding was more common for index children compared with subsequent children (9% vs 3%; adjusted odds ratio, 5.14; 95% CI, 1.48-17.85). Index children lived in households with lower incomes relative to the federal poverty level than did subsequent children (101% vs 132% of federal poverty level; adjusted regression coefficient, –0.31; 95% CI, –0.52 to –0.10), and were more likely to live in households without enough money to pay for basic living expenses (72% vs 55%; adjusted odds ratio, 5.16; 95% CI, 2.34-11.40). <h3>Conclusions and Relevance</h3> These findings suggest that access to abortion enables women to choose to have children at a time when they have more financial and emotional resources to devote to their children." @default.
- W2892333483 created "2018-09-27" @default.
- W2892333483 creator A5006193368 @default.
- W2892333483 creator A5007073090 @default.
- W2892333483 creator A5019369779 @default.
- W2892333483 creator A5021814732 @default.
- W2892333483 creator A5025156167 @default.
- W2892333483 creator A5034200813 @default.
- W2892333483 date "2018-11-01" @default.
- W2892333483 modified "2023-10-14" @default.
- W2892333483 title "Comparison of Health, Development, Maternal Bonding, and Poverty Among Children Born After Denial of Abortion vs After Pregnancies Subsequent to an Abortion" @default.
- W2892333483 cites W119868361 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W1529661496 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W1531588414 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W1770411387 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W1804886546 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W1856722687 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W194753261 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W1973830883 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W1988440122 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W1998195656 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W1998926894 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2003407321 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2004982895 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2005802599 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2014324135 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2020842002 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2030361072 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2034164012 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2035451078 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2050322862 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2055492350 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2073088804 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2076292446 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2076776803 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2079898146 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2106524476 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2107252782 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2111387073 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2118513072 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2122318173 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2122509145 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2123478806 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2127969956 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2136928375 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2149432756 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2151561630 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2159438762 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2159650230 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2285034756 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2332481661 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2416562083 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2551212568 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2567177876 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2575266496 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2604513014 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W2783252364 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W4232038045 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W4233240488 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W4235481272 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W4237413038 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W4241998136 @default.
- W2892333483 cites W4245064052 @default.
- W2892333483 doi "https://doi.org/10.1001/jamapediatrics.2018.1785" @default.
- W2892333483 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/6248140" @default.
- W2892333483 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30193363" @default.
- W2892333483 hasPublicationYear "2018" @default.
- W2892333483 type Work @default.
- W2892333483 sameAs 2892333483 @default.
- W2892333483 citedByCount "69" @default.
- W2892333483 countsByYear W28923334832019 @default.
- W2892333483 countsByYear W28923334832020 @default.
- W2892333483 countsByYear W28923334832021 @default.
- W2892333483 countsByYear W28923334832022 @default.
- W2892333483 countsByYear W28923334832023 @default.
- W2892333483 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2892333483 hasAuthorship W2892333483A5006193368 @default.
- W2892333483 hasAuthorship W2892333483A5007073090 @default.
- W2892333483 hasAuthorship W2892333483A5019369779 @default.
- W2892333483 hasAuthorship W2892333483A5021814732 @default.
- W2892333483 hasAuthorship W2892333483A5025156167 @default.
- W2892333483 hasAuthorship W2892333483A5034200813 @default.
- W2892333483 hasBestOaLocation W28923334831 @default.
- W2892333483 hasConcept C11171543 @default.
- W2892333483 hasConcept C131872663 @default.
- W2892333483 hasConcept C142724271 @default.
- W2892333483 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W2892333483 hasConcept C149923435 @default.
- W2892333483 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W2892333483 hasConcept C187212893 @default.
- W2892333483 hasConcept C23131810 @default.
- W2892333483 hasConcept C2778376644 @default.
- W2892333483 hasConcept C2778642596 @default.
- W2892333483 hasConcept C2779234561 @default.
- W2892333483 hasConcept C2780900520 @default.
- W2892333483 hasConcept C54355233 @default.
- W2892333483 hasConcept C71924100 @default.
- W2892333483 hasConcept C86803240 @default.