Wilson Ellen K
RTI International, 3040 Cornwallis Road, P.O. Box 12194, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709, USA.
Women Health. 2008;47(1):45-64. doi: 10.1300/J013v47n01_03.
This study explored the changes that occur with acculturation in the likelihood that women of Mexican origin in the United States get pregnant, that they considered their pregnancies intended, and that they were happy about their pregnancies. Data were from 924 women of Mexican origin in the 1995 National Survey of Family Growth. Results showed that, controlling for underlying differences in age and parity, Mexican-origin women born in the United States were less likely to conceive a pregnancy than first-generation immigrants (O.R. = 0.69, C.I. 0.56-0.83), but the pregnancies they conceived were less likely to be intended (O.R. = 0.53, C.I. 0.35-0.79), and they were less likely to be happy about them (O.R. = 0.76, C.I. 0.57-1.01). These changes were associated with the decreases in marriage, poverty, and Catholic religiosity that occurred between first-generation immigrants and women of later generations. Findings highlight the unmet need for effective family planning among women of all generations of migration, but particularly those born in the United States.
本研究探讨了美国墨西哥裔女性在文化适应过程中,怀孕可能性、认为怀孕是有意为之以及对怀孕感到高兴等方面所发生的变化。数据来自1995年全国家庭成长调查中的924名墨西哥裔女性。结果显示,在控制年龄和生育胎次的潜在差异后,在美国出生的墨西哥裔女性怀孕的可能性低于第一代移民(比值比=0.69,置信区间0.56 - 0.83),但她们怀上的孩子不太可能是有意为之(比值比=0.53,置信区间0.35 - 0.79),并且她们对怀孕感到高兴的可能性也较小(比值比=0.76,置信区间0.57 - 1.01)。这些变化与第一代移民和后代女性之间在婚姻、贫困和天主教宗教信仰方面的减少有关。研究结果凸显了所有移民代次女性,尤其是在美国出生的女性对有效计划生育的未满足需求。