Trends of the Delay and Variance of Childbirth Timing by Completed Number of Children

The timing of childbirth has undergone significant changes in the past decades. However, it may not be feasible for individuals with many children to further delay the timing of each childbirth given the biological constraints on fecundability and social age deadline for childbirth. Thus, the delay...

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Main Authors: Ryohei Mogi, Shohei Yoda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2024-03-01
Series:Socius
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/23780231241238142
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author Ryohei Mogi
Shohei Yoda
author_facet Ryohei Mogi
Shohei Yoda
author_sort Ryohei Mogi
collection DOAJ
description The timing of childbirth has undergone significant changes in the past decades. However, it may not be feasible for individuals with many children to further delay the timing of each childbirth given the biological constraints on fecundability and social age deadline for childbirth. Thus, the delay in having children and the increasing heterogeneity in its timing may present different trends when analyzed retrospectively by completed number of children. This study investigates the age at childbirth by birth order among women age 40+ in 17 European countries and Canada based on the number of children they have. Our findings show that individuals having more children tend to have each child at earlier ages, with less variation in timing, compared to the counterparts with fewer children. This suggests that changes in the timing of childbirth are more pronounced among individuals having fewer children and less so among those with having more children.
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spelling doaj.art-a14ab09452fb410fb70248d0ecfbad762024-03-18T17:04:03ZengSAGE PublishingSocius2378-02312024-03-011010.1177/23780231241238142Trends of the Delay and Variance of Childbirth Timing by Completed Number of ChildrenRyohei Mogi0Shohei Yoda1Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona, Spain and University of Southern Denmark, Odense, DenmarkNational Institute of Population and Social Security Research, Tokyo, JapanThe timing of childbirth has undergone significant changes in the past decades. However, it may not be feasible for individuals with many children to further delay the timing of each childbirth given the biological constraints on fecundability and social age deadline for childbirth. Thus, the delay in having children and the increasing heterogeneity in its timing may present different trends when analyzed retrospectively by completed number of children. This study investigates the age at childbirth by birth order among women age 40+ in 17 European countries and Canada based on the number of children they have. Our findings show that individuals having more children tend to have each child at earlier ages, with less variation in timing, compared to the counterparts with fewer children. This suggests that changes in the timing of childbirth are more pronounced among individuals having fewer children and less so among those with having more children.https://doi.org/10.1177/23780231241238142
spellingShingle Ryohei Mogi
Shohei Yoda
Trends of the Delay and Variance of Childbirth Timing by Completed Number of Children
Socius
title Trends of the Delay and Variance of Childbirth Timing by Completed Number of Children
title_full Trends of the Delay and Variance of Childbirth Timing by Completed Number of Children
title_fullStr Trends of the Delay and Variance of Childbirth Timing by Completed Number of Children
title_full_unstemmed Trends of the Delay and Variance of Childbirth Timing by Completed Number of Children
title_short Trends of the Delay and Variance of Childbirth Timing by Completed Number of Children
title_sort trends of the delay and variance of childbirth timing by completed number of children
url https://doi.org/10.1177/23780231241238142
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