Consequences of Adolescent Pregnancy/Parenting
- 23 April 1998
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Social Work in Health Care
- Vol. 27 (2) , 49-67
- https://doi.org/10.1300/j010v27n02_03
Abstract
This article reviews the empirical literature on the consequences of adolescent parenting in the arenas of economic impact, health risks to mother and child, parenting practices, and cognitive and behavioral performance of children. These consequences are divided between the direct effects of adolescent pregnancy and indirect effects, the latter of which are the socioeconomic and background correlates that also contribute to the risk of adolescent pregnancy, such as socioeconomic status, educational level, family structure, and family size. From this review of factors, social work practice and policy recommendations to reduce risk will be explored.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- How Old Are U.S. Fathers?Family Planning Perspectives, 1995
- School‐Based Prenatal and Postpartum Care: Strategies for Meeting the Medical and Educational Needs of Pregnant and Parenting StudentsJournal of School Health, 1992
- Teenage Mothers and Welfare DependencyJournal of Family Issues, 1991
- School-Age Offspring of Adolescent Mothers: Environments and OutcomesFamily Relations, 1991
- Welfare Receipt Among Black and White Adolescent MothersJournal of Family Issues, 1990
- Factors Affecting the Probability of School DropoutJournal of Adolescent Research, 1990
- Adolescent Childbearing and High School Completion in the 1980s: Have Things Changed?Family Planning Perspectives, 1989
- Adolescent pregnancy: Biobehavioral determinants of outcomeThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1984
- The Long-Term Evolution of the Family Structure of Teenage and Older MothersJournal of Marriage and Family, 1982
- Teenage, Lower-Class, Black Mothers and Their Preterm Infants: An Intervention and Developmental Follow-UpChild Development, 1980