Predictors of Repeat Pregnancies Among Low-Income Adolescents
Abstract
The authors compared a group of 58 adolescent girls who bad been pregnant once during a two-year period with an age-matched group of 58 girls who bad become pregnant at least twice during the same period. They found that the girls' attitudes toward contraception did not predict contraceptive use. Regular use of contraception was associated with a positive relationship between the girls and their mothers and with the presence of the girls' fathers in the home. The authors suggest that parental support of contraception plays a more important role in preventing repeat pregnancies than does the adolescents' reported attitudes toward contraception.
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