Maternal Age and Infant Mortality for White, Black, and Mexican Mothers in the United States

This paper assesses the pattern of infant mortality by maternal age for white, black, and Mexican mothers using the 2013 Period Linked Birth/Infant Death Public Use File from the Centers for Disease Control. The results are consistent with the “weathering” hypothesis, which suggests that white women...

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Main Author: Philip N. Cohen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for Sociological Science 2016-01-01
Series:Sociological Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.sociologicalscience.com/articles-v3-2-32/
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author Philip N. Cohen
author_facet Philip N. Cohen
author_sort Philip N. Cohen
collection DOAJ
description This paper assesses the pattern of infant mortality by maternal age for white, black, and Mexican mothers using the 2013 Period Linked Birth/Infant Death Public Use File from the Centers for Disease Control. The results are consistent with the “weathering” hypothesis, which suggests that white women benefit from delayed childbearing while for black women early childbearing is adaptive because of deteriorating health status through the childbearing years. For white women, the risk (adjusted for covariates) of infant death is U-shaped—lowest in the early thirties—while for black women the risk increases linearly with age. Mexican-origin women show a J-shape, with highest risk at the oldest ages. The results underscore the need for understanding the relationship between maternal age and infant mortality in the context of unequal health experiences across race/ethnic groups in the US.
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spelling doaj.art-4e37f8c386b8441dbbfd65d9bc1c639c2022-12-22T00:56:56ZengSociety for Sociological ScienceSociological Science2330-66962330-66962016-01-0132323810.15195/v3.a23144Maternal Age and Infant Mortality for White, Black, and Mexican Mothers in the United StatesPhilip N. Cohen0 University of Maryland, College Park This paper assesses the pattern of infant mortality by maternal age for white, black, and Mexican mothers using the 2013 Period Linked Birth/Infant Death Public Use File from the Centers for Disease Control. The results are consistent with the “weathering” hypothesis, which suggests that white women benefit from delayed childbearing while for black women early childbearing is adaptive because of deteriorating health status through the childbearing years. For white women, the risk (adjusted for covariates) of infant death is U-shaped—lowest in the early thirties—while for black women the risk increases linearly with age. Mexican-origin women show a J-shape, with highest risk at the oldest ages. The results underscore the need for understanding the relationship between maternal age and infant mortality in the context of unequal health experiences across race/ethnic groups in the US.https://www.sociologicalscience.com/articles-v3-2-32/Health DisparitiesInfant MortalityMaternal HealthRace/Ethnic InequalityWeathering
spellingShingle Philip N. Cohen
Maternal Age and Infant Mortality for White, Black, and Mexican Mothers in the United States
Sociological Science
Health Disparities
Infant Mortality
Maternal Health
Race/Ethnic Inequality
Weathering
title Maternal Age and Infant Mortality for White, Black, and Mexican Mothers in the United States
title_full Maternal Age and Infant Mortality for White, Black, and Mexican Mothers in the United States
title_fullStr Maternal Age and Infant Mortality for White, Black, and Mexican Mothers in the United States
title_full_unstemmed Maternal Age and Infant Mortality for White, Black, and Mexican Mothers in the United States
title_short Maternal Age and Infant Mortality for White, Black, and Mexican Mothers in the United States
title_sort maternal age and infant mortality for white black and mexican mothers in the united states
topic Health Disparities
Infant Mortality
Maternal Health
Race/Ethnic Inequality
Weathering
url https://www.sociologicalscience.com/articles-v3-2-32/
work_keys_str_mv AT philipncohen maternalageandinfantmortalityforwhiteblackandmexicanmothersintheunitedstates