Title of article
Psychosocial risk factors for pregnancy risk-taking in young women in emerging adulthood: Evidence from the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health
Author/Authors
LAUREN MILLER-LEWIS1، نويسنده , , TRACEY WADE1، نويسنده , , & CHRISTINA LEE2، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
14
From page
17
To page
30
Abstract
This study represents the first longitudinal investigation of distal psychosocial predictors of pregnancy risk-taking in young
Australian women. Participants were from the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health. Two mail-out surveys
assessing sociodemographic, education/competence, psychosocial wellbeing, and aspiration/identity factors, were completed
at ages 18 and 22 by 1647 young women in emerging adulthood, and a third survey assessing pregnancy risk-taking
behaviour was completed by a subsample of 90 young women at age 24. Higher psychosocial distress at age 22 was a risk
factor for pregnancy risk-taking at age 24 (b= 0.29 – 0.38). Post hoc analyses suggested that the strongest component of
psychosocial distress when predicting pregnancy risk-taking was higher depressive symptoms (b =0.44 – 0.68). Demographic,
education, unemployment, and future aspirations factors at age 18 and 22 were unrelated to pregnancy risk-taking
at age 24.
Journal title
Australian Journal of Psychology
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Australian Journal of Psychology
Record number
707285
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