The children of adolescent mothers: Physical, academic, and psychological outcomes☆
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Baby-led weaning in Italy and potential implications for infant development
2021, AppetiteCitation Excerpt :We also completed hierarchical regression analyses to evaluate the association between the age at which infants achieved each of the three developmental milestones (sitting unsupported, crawling, and utterance of first words) and the three feeding variables (percentage of spoon feeding, purée feeding, and family-food feeding). We preliminarily checked whether any of these three developmental measures correlated with several variables which are possibly related to early child development: infant's gender, birth order (Day & Heckman, 2013), infant's birth weight (Gill, May-Benson, Teasdale, & Munsell, 2013), number of months infants have been breastfed (Choi, Kang, & Chung, 2018), mother's age (Brooks-Gunn & Furstenberg, 1986), months after birth mother returned to work (Baker & Milligan, 2010), marital status, yearly income (Votruba-Drzal, 2003), maternal education (Jeong, McCoy, & Fink, 2017) (Supplementary Table 1). In the hierarchical regressions, we controlled for infant's age and for the variables which were significantly related to the developmental outcomes.
Teen mothers who are daughters of teen mothers: Psychological intergenerational dimensions of early motherhood
2017, Children and Youth Services ReviewBecoming a sexual being: The ‘elephant in the room’ of adolescent brain development
2017, Developmental Cognitive NeuroscienceCitation Excerpt :We do want to state explicitly that our goal is not to introduce new barriers to young women seeking reliable contraception, but instead propose that having more information about the interaction between hormonal contraceptives and neurodevelopmental trajectories would help increase the safety, efficacy and impact of contraceptives for young women. The global trend towards later childbearing has been a positive trajectory, as there is clear consensus that very early childbearing, before age 15, has detrimental effects on the health, socioeconomic, educational and social outcomes of both mothers and infants (Brooks-Gunn & Furstenberg, 1986; Gibb et al., 2014; Hofferth and Reid, 2001; Brooks-Gunn and Furstenberg, 1986). Despite this knowledge on outcomes, we have very little insight into the neural developmental impacts of early childbearing.
A test of life history strategy theory as a predictor of criminal violence across 51 nations
2016, Personality and Individual DifferencesCitation Excerpt :Another important aspect of a fast LHS – adolescent fertility – has also been found to predict intra-societal violence across US states (Picket, Mookherjee, & Wilkinson, 2005), countries (Hunt, 2006; Minkov, 2011; Picket et al., 2005), and neighborhoods of Bogota, Colombia (Gaviria, Medina, & Tamayao, 2010). Individual-level analyses suggest that children, especially boys, born to teenage mothers (in comparison with children born to older mothers) are characterized by greater hostility and “undercontrol of behavior” (Brooks-Gunn & Furstenberg, 1986), display more child conduct problems (Christ et al., 1990), and are atrisk for engaging in chronic juvenile offending (Conseur, Rivara, Barnoski, & Emanuel, 1997). One plausible explanation of these associations is the same as in the case of parental absenteeism: parental control and support are important deterrents of juvenile delinquency (Wright & Cullen, 2001); however adolescent mothers are often incapable of providing adequate control and support.
Teen childbearing and offspring internalizing symptoms: The mediating role of child maltreatment
2021, Development and Psychopathology
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This article was prepared with much appreciated support from The Commonwealth Fund.