Partnered, cohabiting, or married: childbearing and mothers' mid-life health in the US, UK, and Norway
Partnered, cohabiting, or married: childbearing and mothers' mid-life health in the US, UK, and Norway
The protective aspects of relationships for health have been extensively studied. Here, we assess whether different dimensions of partnership status at the time of a child’s birth are associated with better self-assessed health later in mid-life. Data are from three countries with different social welfare policies relating to union status and parenting: the US, the UK, and Norway. Results indicate that women who were partnered at first birth had better health at midlife in all three countries than women who were unpartnered. The analysis indicates no differences in the mid-life health of Norwegian women who were married or cohabiting at birth, whereas for US and UK women, being married at the birth of a first child is more beneficial for mid-life health than bearing the child in a cohabiting union. In the US, women who are least likely to marry do not demonstrate better mid-life health if they had wed relative to cohabiting. In the UK, in contrast, the women least likely to be married at the birth experience better returns if they marry. These findings highlight the importance of paying closer attention to heterogeneous treatment effects as they relate to childbearing, relationship status, and mid-life health.
Childbearing, cohabitation, cross-national, marriage, midlife, women’s health
143-182
Sassler, Sharon
935cc9f0-03c1-4393-b825-9f7257aeb533
Addo, Fenaba Rena
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Perelli-Harris, Brienna
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Lappegård, Trude
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Hoherz, Stefanie
97bd0db7-6f2f-4897-a8af-a8accd3ba73e
8 December 2023
Sassler, Sharon
935cc9f0-03c1-4393-b825-9f7257aeb533
Addo, Fenaba Rena
27d389b6-2c0f-4543-8632-99aa515207b4
Perelli-Harris, Brienna
9d3d6b25-d710-480b-8677-534d58ebe9ed
Lappegård, Trude
7e588c7c-0a03-4d92-8a79-6b0e2be0a42f
Hoherz, Stefanie
97bd0db7-6f2f-4897-a8af-a8accd3ba73e
Sassler, Sharon, Addo, Fenaba Rena, Perelli-Harris, Brienna, Lappegård, Trude and Hoherz, Stefanie
(2023)
Partnered, cohabiting, or married: childbearing and mothers' mid-life health in the US, UK, and Norway.
In,
Blair, Sampson Lee and Zhang, Yongjun
(eds.)
Cohabitation and the Evolving Nature of Intimate and Family Relationships.
(Contemporary Perspectives in Family Research, 24)
Emerald Publishing, .
(doi:10.1108/S1530-35352023006).
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Book Section
Abstract
The protective aspects of relationships for health have been extensively studied. Here, we assess whether different dimensions of partnership status at the time of a child’s birth are associated with better self-assessed health later in mid-life. Data are from three countries with different social welfare policies relating to union status and parenting: the US, the UK, and Norway. Results indicate that women who were partnered at first birth had better health at midlife in all three countries than women who were unpartnered. The analysis indicates no differences in the mid-life health of Norwegian women who were married or cohabiting at birth, whereas for US and UK women, being married at the birth of a first child is more beneficial for mid-life health than bearing the child in a cohabiting union. In the US, women who are least likely to marry do not demonstrate better mid-life health if they had wed relative to cohabiting. In the UK, in contrast, the women least likely to be married at the birth experience better returns if they marry. These findings highlight the importance of paying closer attention to heterogeneous treatment effects as they relate to childbearing, relationship status, and mid-life health.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 8 December 2023
Published date: 8 December 2023
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© 2024 by Emerald Publishing Limited All rights of reproduction in any form reserved.
Keywords:
Childbearing, cohabitation, cross-national, marriage, midlife, women’s health
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 491947
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491947
ISSN: 1530-3535
PURE UUID: 850810cd-50ff-4d4f-9811-88e9b7e4b251
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Date deposited: 09 Jul 2024 17:09
Last modified: 12 Jul 2024 01:48
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Contributors
Author:
Sharon Sassler
Author:
Fenaba Rena Addo
Author:
Trude Lappegård
Author:
Stefanie Hoherz
Editor:
Sampson Lee Blair
Editor:
Yongjun Zhang
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