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Associations between lifetime stress exposure, race, and first-birth intendedness in the United States.

Jennifer MalatElaina Johns-WolfeTeresa SmithGrant S ShieldsFarrah JacquezTheodore F Robles
Published in: Journal of health psychology (2020)
This study examined how lifetime stress exposure and race are associated with first-birth intendedness, and whether these associations differ based on stress exposure timing. Greater lifetime stress exposure was related to increased first-birth intendedness for black women but was unrelated or even associated with decreased first-birth intendedness for white women, depending on stress exposure timing. These effects were robust while controlling for age, partner status, household income, and education, and they differed based on the timing of participants' stress exposure. These data thus provide evidence that first-birth intendedness is influenced by both lifetime stress exposure and race in the United States.
Keyphrases
  • stress induced
  • gestational age
  • pregnancy outcomes
  • healthcare
  • pregnant women
  • machine learning
  • physical activity
  • mental health
  • skeletal muscle
  • preterm birth