Investigating The Relationship Between Teenage Childbearing and Psychological Distress Using Longitudinal Evidence
Investigating The Relationship Between Teenage Childbearing and Psychological Distress Using Longitudinal Evidence
Investigating The Relationship Between Teenage Childbearing and Psychological Distress Using Longitudinal Evidence
The high levels of depression among teenage mothers have received consider-
able research attention in smaller targeted samples, but a large-scale examina-
tion of the complex relationship between adolescent childbearing and psycho-
logical distress that explores bidirectional causality is needed. Using the
National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health) and the Early
Childhood Longitudinal Study—Birth Cohort, we found that teenage mothers
had higher levels of distress than their childless adolescent peers and adult
mothers, but the experience of teenage childbearing did not appear to be the
cause. Rather, teenage mothers’ distress levels were already higher than their
peers before they became pregnant, and they remained higher after childbear-
ing and into early and middle adulthood. We also found that distress did not in-
crease the likelihood of adolescent childbearing except among poor teenagers.
In this group, experiencing high levels of distress markedly increased the prob-
ability of becoming a teenage mother. Among nonpoor teenage girls, the rela-
tionship between distress and subsequent teenage childbearing was spurious.
Teenage childbearing continues to be framed in this particularly vulnerable group could have
as an important social and public health prob- negative consequences for both mother and
lem in America (Furstenberg 2003). Activists, child. Yet few of the many studies addressing
pundits, and researchers have paid particular this topic have analyzed nationally representa-
attention to the economic and social conse- tive, longitudinal data.
quences of adolescent parenthood (Hoffman To improve our understanding of the effects
1998). There has also been a growing interdis- of teenage childbearing, we used two national
ciplinary body of research on teenage mothers’ longitudinal surveys to assess whether adoles-
mental health. Most of this work is grounded in cent mothers are more distressed than both
the apprehension that high levels of depression their childless teenage peers and older mothers
* This study was supported by a Council on ment is due Ronald R. Rindfuss and Barbara
Research and Creative Work grant at the University Entwisle for assistance in the original design.
of Colorado at Boulder, and by the Department of Persons interested in obtaining data files from Add
Health and Human Services, Office of Public Health should contact Add Health, Carolina
Health Service grant 1 APRPA006015-01-00. This Population Center, 123 W. Franklin Street, Chapel
research uses data from the National Longitudinal Hill, NC 27516-2524 ([email protected]). No di-
Study of Adolescent Health (a.k.a., Add Health), a rect support was received from grant P01-
program project designed by J. Richard Udry, Peter HD31921 for this analysis. The authors thank Jane
S. Bearman, and Kathleen Mullan Harris, and Menken for her helpful comments. Address corre-
funded by grant P01-HD31921 from the Eunice spondence to Stefanie Mollborn, University of
Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health Colorado at Boulder, Institute of Behavioral
and Human Development, with cooperative fund- Science, 483 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309-0483 (e-
ing from 17 other agencies. Special acknowledg- mail: [email protected]).
Downloaded from hsb.sagepub.com at University of Strathclyde on March 20, 2015
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TEENAGE CHILDBEARING AND DISTRESS 311
(research question 1).1 We also explored throughout their life course (see Settersten
sources of distress in teenage mothers, which 2003). Social norms about the appropriate tim-
have received little direct empirical attention in ing and ordering of transitions are expected to
the past (for important exceptions, see Falci regulate whether such consequences are posi-
and Mortimer 2007; Kalil and Kunz 2002). In tive or negative for an individual (Neugarten,
particular, we asked whether the experience of Moore, and Lowe 1965). However, recent evi-
teenage parenting itself, the selection of dis- dence suggests that more diversity in ordering
tressed girls into motherhood, or a combination and timing life transitions is being tolerated
of the two accounted for subsequently higher now than in the past (Rindfuss, Swicegood, and
levels of distress among adolescent mothers Rosenfeld 1987). Evidence suggests that
(research question 2). This study also investi- teenage childbearing is one “off-time” transi-
gated whether distress increased the likelihood tion that may still be associated with reason-
of subsequent teenage childbearing, an idea ably strong societal norms and negative sanc-
that has received some empirical support but tions for the individuals who violate them
garnered less attention than the opposite causal (Mollborn 2009). These sanctions can be inter-
direction. We examined whether psychological personal, such as facing explicit disapproval
distress itself influenced adolescent childbear- from others, or institutional, such as not re-
ing, or whether any relationship between the ceiving maternity leave from high school.
two was a spurious artifact of underlying fac- Regardless of the sanctions experienced, it
tors such as socioeconomic status, race, or eth- seems possible that teenage parents who vio-
nicity (research question 3). Finally, we looked late societal norms about appropriate transi-
for variation in the relationships between teen tions to parenthood might suffer mental health
childbearing and distress and vice versa across consequences. Just as experiencing discrimina-
racial-ethnic, socioeconomic, and age groups tion based on race or sexual orientation in
(research question 4). Our review of previous everyday life has been linked to poorer mental
research and findings are organized on the ba- health (Mays and Cochran 2001; Williams,
sis of these four research questions. Neighbors, and Jackson 2003), experiencing
Finding preliminary answers to these ques- everyday interpersonal or institutional sanc-
tions using longitudinal, nationally representa- tions may cause psychological distress among
tive data is important because of the conse- teenage parents. Violating social norms has
quences that psychological distress can have been shown to increase negative emotions such
for teenage parents and their families. as embarrassment or shame (Wooten 2006),
Understanding more about the dynamics of the which could have implications for mental
potentially bidirectional relationship between health. Withdrawing social support as a nega-
distress and teenage childbearing would allow tive sanction may also increase distress.
for more effective policies targeting vulnerable While life course theory has anticipated neg-
groups and provide a clearer sense of appro- ative long-term consequences of violating tran-
priate research priorities. For example, if be- sition norms, research has rarely documented
coming a teenage mother increases the proba- these consequences empirically. This lack of
bility of psychological distress, then research substantiation of the theory has led to influen-
and interventions targeted at treating adoles- tial criticisms of the life course perspective
cent parents may improve the outcomes of both (Marini 1984) and a turn away from transition
mother and child. If, instead, being distressed norms toward the idea of an individualized life
makes a teenage girl more likely to have a ba- course in research (Shanahan 2000).
by, then a suitable focus for research and poli- Examining the causal links between teenage
cy would be on identifying and reducing dis- childbearing and distress in this study can pro-
tress among adolescent girls. vide a new opportunity to assess this central
tenet of life course theory by examining
BACKGROUND AND QUESTIONS whether teenage mothers, who may have vio-
Studies of teenage childbearing often draw lated norms about the transition to parenthood,
insight from life course theory (see Elder and suffer short- and/or long-term mental health
Shanahan 2006 for an overview). This theory consequences.
posits that the timing and ordering of life tran- Despite the compelling theoretical justifica-
sitions, such as the transition to parenthood, tion for teenage childbearing being associated
have long-term consequences for individuals with elevated depression and the many empiri-
301 to 400, and > 400), as well as an indicator er = 1) and recoded into a series of indicator
for missing income information. Teen respon- variables (1 to 3, 3 to 3.49, and 3.5 to 4), with
dents reported their race-ethnicity (Latino and an additional indicator for missing GPA infor-
non-Latino white, African American, Asian/ mation. A school attachment scale averaged
Pacific Islander, Native American/American
five items about feeling close to people at one’s
Indian, and “other” race).
Two variables measured school-related fac- school, feeling part of one’s school, feeling
tors. Student-reported grade point average happy to be at school, feeling that teachers treat
(GPA) included four subjects, averaged into a students fairly, and feeling safe at school. The
four-point scale (A = 4, B = 3, C = 2, D or low- scale ranged from 1 (weak attachment) to 5
Data from ECLS-B assessed teenage moth- Question 2: Does Teenage Childbearing
ers’ levels of distress well into adulthood (see Lead to Distress?
Figure 1). We identified about 1,700 new Past research has shown that comparing
mothers who were at least age 20 at the study’s teenage parents to their childless peers and old-
focal birth but who first gave birth as er parents as we did above frequently results in
teenagers. While distress levels among moth- selection bias, i.e., teenagers who bear children
ers who were age 20 or older at first birth de- are very different on average than those who do
creased steadily with age from .48 at ages not even before they get pregnant. Because of
20–24 to .34 at age 35–39, postpartum distress selection, observed differences in distress lev-
levels at the same ages among respondents who els between teenage mothers and childless
peers or older mothers could be the result of
were once teenage mothers actually increased
underlying factors rather than a result of the
from .52 to .57. Former teenage mothers had experience of teenage motherhood itself. For
significantly higher distress levels than adult this reason, comparing teenage mothers with a
first-time mothers for all age categories from “control” group of equivalent respondents
20 to 39 (p < .01). When we compared average would most accurately estimate the association
distress levels for current versus all former between the experience of teenage motherhood
teenage mothers, they did not differ signifi- and distress. The longitudinal design of the
cantly (.56 and .51, respectively). This finding Add Health survey allows for a natural com-
provides further evidence that adolescent parison group of future teenage mothers, which
childbearing was not associated with a spike in can help establish the degree to which selection
distress levels, but rather teenage mothers’ ele- into adolescent childbearing accounts for ob-
vated psychological distress was long-term. served differences in distress between teenage
mothers and childless teenagers. Regression
In sum, evidence showed that teenage moth-
analyses reported in Table 2 compared the
ers were more distressed on average than both
wave two distress levels of girls who were
their childless teenage peers and older mothers. teenage mothers by wave two (N = 239) with
Teenage mothers’ higher distress levels contin- those who were not yet pregnant by wave two
ued throughout adolescence, young adulthood, (they gave birth at least 10 months after the
and middle adulthood, suggesting that their month of interview) but who would become
distress may be long-term rather than short- teenage mothers by wave three, five years lat-
term in nature. er (N = 558). In other words, the former group
had already experienced teenage motherhood in Table 3 addressed this question using a bi-
when psychological distress was measured. variate logistic regression analysis that esti-
The second group had not, but was assumed to mated the association between distress scale
be otherwise similar to the first group with the scores at wave one and the likelihood of subse-
exception of being older. We controlled for age quently becoming a teenage mother sometime
in the regression models. Table 2 shows that in the following six years (pregnant at least 10
there were no significantly different wave two months after the month of the wave one inter-
or three distress levels between these groups, view and giving birth by wave three and before
suggesting that experiencing teenage mother- age 20). There was a very strong association
hood did not increase distress. between these variables: Each one unit increase
If the experience of teenage childbearing in the psychological distress scale measured at
was not related to distress, then why were wave one more than doubled a girl’s odds of
teenage mothers more distressed than their becoming a teenage mother by wave three (OR
childless peers? We suspect that underlying = 2.08, p < .01).
factors may have caused these girls to be dis- In sum, using natural comparison groups to
tressed before they became teenage mothers. establish causality more firmly than in past re-
Analyses reported in Table 2 addressed this search, our findings suggest that teenage moth-
question by comparing girls who became preg- ers’ higher distress scores were the result of
nant after wave two and who gave birth as distress prior to childbearing rather than the ex-
teenagers to those who were not teenage moth- perience of teenage motherhood itself. In the
ers by wave three. Wave two distress scores al- opposite causal direction, distress was posi-
low us to assess the former group’s mental tively related to subsequent teenage childbear-
health before they got pregnant. Post hoc tests ing; multivariate analyses reported below ex-
based on Table 2 show that girls who would plored potential causes of this association.
eventually become teenage mothers were sig-
nificantly more distressed at wave two than Question 3: Does Distress Lead to Teenage
their childless peers (p < .01). The difference Childbearing?
between these two groups’ distress levels re- Bivariate evidence suggested that psycho-
mained similar and significant (p < .01) at logical distress was associated with subsequent
wave three, after teen childbearing had oc- teenage childbearing. But was this relationship
curred for the former group. causal, or did underlying factors affecting both
This evidence suggests that teenage mothers distress and teenage motherhood explain the
may have been more distressed than their relationship between the two? Model 2 in Table
childless peers because they were already dis- 3 added controls to the distress measure to es-
tressed before becoming pregnant rather than timate the likelihood of teenage childbearing.
the experience of adolescent childbearing in- The psychological distress coefficient dropped
creasing distress. Does it follow that distress from .73 (OR = 2.08) in model 1 to .07 (OR =
among adolescents was associated with higher 1.07) in model 2 and lost statistical signifi-
odds of becoming a teenage mother? Model 1 cance; thus, background factors accounted for
the bivariate relationship between distress and Supplemental analyses (not shown) revealed
subsequent teenage motherhood. Significant that just four control variables in combination
wave one risk factors for becoming a teenage eliminated the significance of the distress co-
mother by wave three included low parental ed- efficient: parental education, grade point aver-
ucation; low income; being African American age, family structure, and having had sexual in-
or Hispanic; low grades; younger age; single- tercourse. At least one category of each of
mother, stepparent, or “other” family struc- these measures also significantly predicted dis-
tures compared to two biological parents; less tress at wave one. We conclude that the rela-
satisfying parent-teen relationships; having tionship between psychological distress and
had penile-vaginal intercourse by wave one; subsequent teenage motherhood was spurious
and being in a romantic relationship at wave in this analysis, based on the findings that these
one. four background factors eliminated the signif-
Stefanie Mollborn is an assistant professor of sociology and faculty in the Health and Society Program of
the Institute of Behavioral Science at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Her research focuses on social
psychological approaches to understanding health over the life course. Current projects include an analysis
of the importance of resources for the early development of teenage parents’ children and an examination
of the antecedents and consequences of social norms about teen pregnancy.
Elizabeth Morningstar is a doctoral student in sociology at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Her re-
search focuses on gender, families, and health. She is currently researching quality of life and service needs
among leukemia and lymphoma survivors and plans to explore patients’ and families’ responses to anti-
retroviral treatments in sub-Saharan Africa.