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Journal Article
Starting Age and Subsequent Birth Intervals in Cohabitational Unions in Current Danish Cohorts, 1975
Available to Purchase
Demography (1980) 17 (3): 275–295.
Published: 01 August 1980
.... Central Bureau of Statistics of Norway, Article No. 116. Bumpass L. L. , Rindfuss R. R. , & Janosik R. B. ( 1978 ). Age and Marital Status at First Birth and the Pace of Subsequent Fertility . Demography , 15 , 75 – 86 . 10.2307/2060491 Coombs L. , & Freedman...
View articletitled, Starting Age and <span class="search-highlight">Subsequent</span> <span class="search-highlight">Birth</span> Intervals in Cohabitational Unions in Current Danish Cohorts, 1975
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for article titled, Starting Age and <span class="search-highlight">Subsequent</span> <span class="search-highlight">Birth</span> Intervals in Cohabitational Unions in Current Danish Cohorts, 1975
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in Birth Spacing and Health and Socioeconomic Outcomes Across the Life Course: Evidence From the Utah Population Database
> Demography
Published: 01 June 2022
Fig. 1 Distribution of the length of preceding and subsequent birth intervals (in months) in Utah, 1900–2019
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in Birth Spacing and Health and Socioeconomic Outcomes Across the Life Course: Evidence From the Utah Population Database
> Demography
Published: 01 June 2022
Fig. 2 The relationship between the length of the preceding and subsequent birth intervals and the probability of LBW in sibling groups with at least three children born in Utah in 1947–2019. Results are from linear probability models with and without sibling fixed effects.
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in Birth Spacing and Health and Socioeconomic Outcomes Across the Life Course: Evidence From the Utah Population Database
> Demography
Published: 01 June 2022
Fig. 3 The relationship between the length of the preceding and subsequent birth intervals and the probability of preterm birth in sibling groups with at least three children born in Utah in 1947–2019. Results are from linear probability models with and without sibling fixed effects.
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in Birth Spacing and Health and Socioeconomic Outcomes Across the Life Course: Evidence From the Utah Population Database
> Demography
Published: 01 June 2022
Fig. 4 The relationship between the length of the preceding and subsequent birth intervals and the probability of infant mortality in sibling groups with at least three children born in Utah in 1947–2019. Results are from linear probability models with and without sibling fixed effects.
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in Birth Spacing and Health and Socioeconomic Outcomes Across the Life Course: Evidence From the Utah Population Database
> Demography
Published: 01 June 2022
Fig. 5 The relationship between the length of the preceding and subsequent birth intervals and the probability of college graduation in sibling groups with at least three children born in Utah in 1950–1990. Results are from linear probability models with and without sibling fixed effects.
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in Birth Spacing and Health and Socioeconomic Outcomes Across the Life Course: Evidence From the Utah Population Database
> Demography
Published: 01 June 2022
Fig. 6 The relationship between the length of the preceding and subsequent birth intervals and occupational status in sibling groups with at least three children born in Utah in 1950–1990. Results are from linear regression models with and without sibling fixed effects.
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in Birth Spacing and Health and Socioeconomic Outcomes Across the Life Course: Evidence From the Utah Population Database
> Demography
Published: 01 June 2022
Fig. 7 The relationship between the length of the preceding and subsequent birth intervals and hazard of mortality in sibling groups with at least three children born in Utah in 1900–1949. Results are from Cox regression models and Cox models stratified by sibling group.
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in The Impact of Childhood Mortality on Fertility in Rural Tanzania: Evidence From the Ifakara and Rufiji Health and Demographic Surveillance Systems
> Demography
Published: 01 December 2023
Fig. 2 Relationship between subsequent birth interval length and child survival: 25,710 children born in Ifakara and Rufiji, Tanzania, 2000–2015. The analysis includes 15,291 mothers who were born in 1981–1984. The black line is the mean trend.
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in The Impact of Childhood Mortality on Fertility in Rural Tanzania: Evidence From the Ifakara and Rufiji Health and Demographic Surveillance Systems
> Demography
Published: 01 December 2023
Fig. 3 Duration of subsequent birth intervals, by mortality exposure type: 25,710 children born in Ifakara and Rufiji, Tanzania, 2000–2015. The analysis includes 15,291 mothers who were born in 1981–1984. Horizontal black bars indicate median durations, and vertical bars indicate the range
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in Birth Intervals and Health in Adulthood: A Comparison of Siblings Using Swedish Register Data
> Demography
Published: 21 May 2018
Fig. 2 Height at ages 17–20 by preceding and subsequent birth intervals, Swedish men born in 1962–1979. The analysis population for examining preceding birth intervals consists of individuals in sibling groups with at least three children, excluding the firstborn. The analysis population
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in Birth Intervals and Health in Adulthood: A Comparison of Siblings Using Swedish Register Data
> Demography
Published: 21 May 2018
Fig. 3 Physical fitness at ages 17–20 by preceding and subsequent birth intervals, Swedish men born in 1962–1979. The analysis population for examining preceding birth intervals consists of individuals in sibling groups with at least three children, excluding the firstborn. The analysis
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in Birth Intervals and Health in Adulthood: A Comparison of Siblings Using Swedish Register Data
> Demography
Published: 21 May 2018
Fig. 6 Hazard of mortality at ages 30–74 by preceding and subsequent birth intervals, Swedish men and women born in 1938–1960. The analysis population for examining preceding birth intervals consists of individuals in sibling groups with at least three children, excluding the firstborn
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in The Long-Term Cognitive and Socioeconomic Consequences of Birth Intervals: A Within-Family Sibling Comparison Using Swedish Register Data
> Demography
Published: 13 February 2017
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in The Long-Term Cognitive and Socioeconomic Consequences of Birth Intervals: A Within-Family Sibling Comparison Using Swedish Register Data
> Demography
Published: 13 February 2017
Fig. 3 Grade point average at age 16 by preceding and subsequent birth intervals, Swedish men and women born 1982–1991. The analysis population for examining preceding birth intervals consists of individuals in sibling groups with at least three children, excluding the firstborn. The analysis
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in The Long-Term Cognitive and Socioeconomic Consequences of Birth Intervals: A Within-Family Sibling Comparison Using Swedish Register Data
> Demography
Published: 13 February 2017
Fig. 4 Cognitive ability at ages 17–20 by preceding and subsequent birth intervals, Swedish men born 1965–1977. The analysis population for examining preceding birth intervals consists of individuals in sibling groups with at least three children, excluding the firstborn. The analysis population
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in The Long-Term Cognitive and Socioeconomic Consequences of Birth Intervals: A Within-Family Sibling Comparison Using Swedish Register Data
> Demography
Published: 13 February 2017
Fig. 5 Years of education by age 30 by preceding and subsequent birth intervals, Swedish men and women born 1960–1981. The analysis population for examining preceding birth intervals consists of individuals in sibling groups with at least three children, excluding the firstborn. The analysis
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in The Long-Term Cognitive and Socioeconomic Consequences of Birth Intervals: A Within-Family Sibling Comparison Using Swedish Register Data
> Demography
Published: 13 February 2017
Fig. 6 Logged average income over ages 29 to 31 by preceding and subsequent birth intervals, Swedish men born 1960–1981. The analysis population for examining preceding birth intervals consists of individuals in sibling groups with at least three children, excluding the firstborn. The analysis
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Journal Article
Effects of the Timing of Marriage and First Birth of the Spacing of Subsequent Births
Available to Purchase
Demography (1981) 18 (4): 529–548.
Published: 01 November 1981
...Margaret Mooney Marini; Peter J. Hodsdon Abstract Analyzing data from a fifteen-year follow-up survey of high school students originally surveyed in 1957–58 and resurveyed in 1973–74, this paper examines the effects of the timing of marriage and first birth on subsequent child spacing, holding...
View articletitled, Effects of the Timing of Marriage and First <span class="search-highlight">Birth</span> of the Spacing of <span class="search-highlight">Subsequent</span> <span class="search-highlight">Births</span>
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for article titled, Effects of the Timing of Marriage and First <span class="search-highlight">Birth</span> of the Spacing of <span class="search-highlight">Subsequent</span> <span class="search-highlight">Births</span>
Journal Article
Race differences in age at first birth and the pace of subsequent fertility: Implications for the minority group status hypothesis
Available to Purchase
Demography (1982) 19 (3): 301–314.
Published: 01 August 1982
...Craig St. John Abstract We examine race differences in the effects of age at first birth on the pace of subsequent fertility. If race differences in the pace of fertility persist net of age at first birth and socioeconomic variables, they will be taken as new support for the minority group status...
View articletitled, Race differences in age at first <span class="search-highlight">birth</span> and the pace of <span class="search-highlight">subsequent</span> fertility: Implications for the minority group status hypothesis
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for article titled, Race differences in age at first <span class="search-highlight">birth</span> and the pace of <span class="search-highlight">subsequent</span> fertility: Implications for the minority group status hypothesis
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