Confidence in Pregnancy Among U.S. Women

Author:

Greil Arthur L.1ORCID,Lowry Michele H.1,McQuillan Julia2,Slauson‐Blevins Kathleen3,Park Nicholas4,Bornstein Marta5

Affiliation:

1. Alfred University

2. University of Nebraska‐Lincoln

3. Old Dominion University

4. Gavilan College

5. University of South Carolina

Abstract

Researchers often ask women about pregnancy intentions but seldom ask how confident women are that they will be able to become pregnant when they desire. We argue that beliefs about fertility and infertility may function as justifications for behaviors to which one is already committed. Thus, women who have delayed childbearing but who intend to become pregnant may express confidence in their ability to become pregnant, even in the face of diminished odds of conception. Using data from the National Survey of Fertility Barriers, we demonstrate that over 75 percent of women who intend a first or subsequent pregnancy express confidence that they will be able to become pregnant when they wish, even if they perceive themselves as having a fertility problem or meet medical criteria for infertility. Our results are consistent with the motivated reasoning perspective. Our findings suggest that confidence in pregnancy may be a response to social‐structural pressures to delay childbearing among women who intend to become pregnant, but not necessarily the reason for delay.

Funder

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

Wiley

Reference101 articles.

1. Are Women and Men Well Informed about Fertility? Childbearing Intentions, Fertility Knowledge and Information‐Gathering Sources in Portugal;Almeida‐Santos Teresa;Reproductive Health,2017

2. Regression and Ordered Categorical Variables;Anderson John A.;Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series B: Methodological,1984

3. Reproductive technology and the life course: Current debates and research in social egg freezing

4. The social context of retrospective-prospective changes in pregnancy desire during the transition to adulthood: The role of fathers and intimate relationships

5. Declining realisation of reproductive intentions with age

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