尼加拉瓜的多配偶生育:低收入环境下复杂的家庭形成。

IF 4.4 3区 医学 Q1 Social Sciences International Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health Pub Date : 2017-03-03 DOI:10.1363/43e3317
Kammi K Schmeer, Jake Hays
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引用次数: 7

摘要

背景:多伴侣生育(与不止一个伴侣生育)是人口统计学研究中的一个重要主题,但对其在低收入环境中的发病率及其相关性知之甚少,在低收入环境中,由于贫困、婚姻不稳定和早育,发病率可能很高。方法:采用2011-2012年尼加拉瓜国家调查问卷(Demografía y Salud)的数据,计算8320名母亲和2141名有两个或两个以上子女的父亲的多配偶生育患病率。采用Logistic回归和多项回归来确定与多伴侣生育相关的个人和家庭特征。结果:在多子女人群中,33%的母亲和41%的父亲与不止一个伴侣生育。在受教育程度较低的女性、无宗教信仰的男性以及在城市地区长大的女性和男性中,多配偶生育率的患病率较高(优势比为1.3-1.6)。多配偶生育率与母亲当前家庭财富较低、单亲风险增加和母亲和父亲生育率较高有关。与只有一个生育伴侣的父亲相比,有多个生育伴侣的父亲不向至少一个亲生子女提供经济支持或与他们同姓的可能性是后者的六倍。结论:多配偶生育是一种关键的人口和社会现象,可能导致并反映尼加拉瓜重要的性别和家庭结构不平等。多配偶生育的母亲在没有孩子父亲的情况下抚养孩子的风险可能特别高,经济支持水平也很低。
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Multipartner Fertility in Nicaragua: Complex Family Formation in a Low-Income Setting.

Context: Multipartner fertility (having children with more than one partner) is an important topic in demographic research, but little is known about its incidence and correlates in low-income settings, where rates may be high because of poverty, union instability and early childbearing.

Methods: Data from the 2011-2012 Encuesta Nicaragüense de Demografía y Salud were used to calculate the prevalence of multipartner fertility among 8,320 mothers and 2,141 fathers with two or more children. Logistic and multinomial regression were used to identify individual and family characteristics associated with multipartner fertility.

Results: Among those with multiple children, 33% of mothers and 41% of fathers had had children with more than one partner. The prevalence of multipartner fertility was elevated among less-educated women, nonreligious men, and women and men who had grown up in urban areas (odds ratios, 1.3-1.6). Multipartner fertility was associated with lower current household wealth among mothers, and with increased risk of single parenthood and higher fertility among mothers and fathers. Fathers who had had multiple fertility partners were six times as likely as fathers with one fertility partner to report not providing financial support to, or sharing their surname with, at least one of their biological children.

Conclusion: Multipartner fertility is a critical demographic and social phenomenon that may contribute to and reflect important gender and family structure inequalities in Nicaragua. Mothers with multipartner fertility may be at especially high risk of raising children without the children's fathers and with low levels of economic support.

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