The impact of legalized abortion on adolescent childbearing in New York City.
- 1 March 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 80 (3) , 273-278
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.80.3.273
Abstract
In this paper we estimate the impact on adolescent childbearing of the liberalization of the New York State abortion law in 1970. Using Box-Jenkins time series techniques to analyze monthly data on the number of births to White and Black adolescents from January 1963 to December 1987, we found that the level of births to Black adolescents living in New York City fell 18.7 percent, approximately 142 fewer births per month, after the law became effective; the level of White births fell 14.1 percent, approximately 111 fewer births per month. Projections based on the fitted model suggest that a ban on legalized abortion today would have a major impact on adolescent childbearing in New York City as well as other parts of the country, although the magnitude of the change would vary according to local conditions.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- The social and economic correlates of pregnancy resolution among adolescents in New York City, by race and ethnicity: a multivariate analysis.American Journal of Public Health, 1988
- What U.S. Women Think and Do About ContraceptionFamily Planning Perspectives, 1983
- Repeat Pregnancies Among Metropolitan-Area Teenagers: 1971-1979Family Planning Perspectives, 1982
- Liberalized abortion in Oregon: effects on fertility, prematurity, fetal death, and infant death.American Journal of Public Health, 1978
- On a measure of lack of fit in time series modelsBiometrika, 1978
- Legal abortions, subsidized family planning services, and the U.S. “birth dearth”Social Biology, 1977
- Legal Abortion Among New York City Residents: An Analysis According to Socioeconomic and Demographic CharacteristicsFamily Planning Perspectives, 1975
- Abortion, Illegitimacy, and the American Birth RateScience, 1974
- Two years experience in New York City with the liberalized abortion law--progress and problems.American Journal of Public Health, 1973
- Two Years' Experience with a Liberal Abortion Law: Its Impact on Fertility Trends in New York CityFamily Planning Perspectives, 1973