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Unmasking thirty years of change in subnational parity-specific adolescent fertility in Mexico

Unmasking thirty years of change in subnational parity-specific adolescent fertility in Mexico
Unmasking thirty years of change in subnational parity-specific adolescent fertility in Mexico
Background: in 2015 Mexico set a goal to halve its adolescent fertility rate and eliminate childbearing among girls 14 years and younger, but the ambitious goal is severely off track. National estimates show stagnation, and while implementation is targeted at the municipal level,little is known about adolescent fertility in Mexican municipalities.

Objective: this study estimates trends in sub national parity-specific fertility from 1990 to 2020 at all adolescent ages in 2,469 Mexican municipalities. Importantly, the estimates include the fertility of younger adolescents, and parity progression ratios offer a more accurate picture of the true risk of repeat adolescent childbearing.

Methods: this study uses pooled census data and multilevel logistic regression models to estimateage- and parity-specific municipal population proportions. Modeled estimates are used tocalculate second birth parity progression ratios.

Results: the analysis reveals that municipal trends see considerable diversity and change. The results unmask thirty years of flux, and a surprising pattern of convergence in first births alongside little concordance for second births.

Contribution: not only have the estimates not been seen before, but they (1) highlight priorities that might otherwise be overlooked by the national strategy and (2) emphasize the value of tracking first and second adolescent births separately. Ultimately, the findings have relevance far beyond Mexico. They confirm the importance of examining sub national patterns for understanding adolescent childbearing and question the adequacy of ASFR15-19 as the default measure given that repeat births to adolescent mothers as well as births to girls before age 15 remain widespread across the globe
1435-9871
Garbett, Ann
bf9a0fd9-3615-433e-b07e-d016fa29c59e
Neal, Sarah
2b63ebf7-1cf9-423d-80a2-bd99a759f784
Luna Hernandez, Angela
b4de50ed-b80a-4202-aaad-c97d057369ed
Tzavidis, Nikos
431ec55d-c147-466d-9c65-0f377b0c1f6a
Garbett, Ann
bf9a0fd9-3615-433e-b07e-d016fa29c59e
Neal, Sarah
2b63ebf7-1cf9-423d-80a2-bd99a759f784
Luna Hernandez, Angela
b4de50ed-b80a-4202-aaad-c97d057369ed
Tzavidis, Nikos
431ec55d-c147-466d-9c65-0f377b0c1f6a

Garbett, Ann, Neal, Sarah, Luna Hernandez, Angela and Tzavidis, Nikos (2023) Unmasking thirty years of change in subnational parity-specific adolescent fertility in Mexico. Demographic Research. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: in 2015 Mexico set a goal to halve its adolescent fertility rate and eliminate childbearing among girls 14 years and younger, but the ambitious goal is severely off track. National estimates show stagnation, and while implementation is targeted at the municipal level,little is known about adolescent fertility in Mexican municipalities.

Objective: this study estimates trends in sub national parity-specific fertility from 1990 to 2020 at all adolescent ages in 2,469 Mexican municipalities. Importantly, the estimates include the fertility of younger adolescents, and parity progression ratios offer a more accurate picture of the true risk of repeat adolescent childbearing.

Methods: this study uses pooled census data and multilevel logistic regression models to estimateage- and parity-specific municipal population proportions. Modeled estimates are used tocalculate second birth parity progression ratios.

Results: the analysis reveals that municipal trends see considerable diversity and change. The results unmask thirty years of flux, and a surprising pattern of convergence in first births alongside little concordance for second births.

Contribution: not only have the estimates not been seen before, but they (1) highlight priorities that might otherwise be overlooked by the national strategy and (2) emphasize the value of tracking first and second adolescent births separately. Ultimately, the findings have relevance far beyond Mexico. They confirm the importance of examining sub national patterns for understanding adolescent childbearing and question the adequacy of ASFR15-19 as the default measure given that repeat births to adolescent mothers as well as births to girls before age 15 remain widespread across the globe

Text
Demographic Research Paper - Accepted Manuscript
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 6 July 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 480914
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480914
ISSN: 1435-9871
PURE UUID: ff5ad7ad-bb55-4eae-8795-949cb43e36e8
ORCID for Ann Garbett: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0063-1529
ORCID for Sarah Neal: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1812-7221
ORCID for Angela Luna Hernandez: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8629-1918
ORCID for Nikos Tzavidis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8413-8095

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Date deposited: 10 Aug 2023 16:55
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:28

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Contributors

Author: Ann Garbett ORCID iD
Author: Sarah Neal ORCID iD
Author: Nikos Tzavidis ORCID iD

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