Social and demographic drivers of trend and seasonality in elective abortions in Denmark

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Standard

Social and demographic drivers of trend and seasonality in elective abortions in Denmark. / Bruckner, Tim A.; Mortensen, Laust H.; Catalano, Ralph A.

I: B M C Pregnancy and Childbirth, Bind 17, 214, 04.07.2017, s. 1-8.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Bruckner, TA, Mortensen, LH & Catalano, RA 2017, 'Social and demographic drivers of trend and seasonality in elective abortions in Denmark', B M C Pregnancy and Childbirth, bind 17, 214, s. 1-8. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12884-017-1397-2

APA

Bruckner, T. A., Mortensen, L. H., & Catalano, R. A. (2017). Social and demographic drivers of trend and seasonality in elective abortions in Denmark. B M C Pregnancy and Childbirth, 17, 1-8. [214]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12884-017-1397-2

Vancouver

Bruckner TA, Mortensen LH, Catalano RA. Social and demographic drivers of trend and seasonality in elective abortions in Denmark. B M C Pregnancy and Childbirth. 2017 jul. 4;17:1-8. 214. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12884-017-1397-2

Author

Bruckner, Tim A. ; Mortensen, Laust H. ; Catalano, Ralph A. / Social and demographic drivers of trend and seasonality in elective abortions in Denmark. I: B M C Pregnancy and Childbirth. 2017 ; Bind 17. s. 1-8.

Bibtex

@article{8839a677b7be45e9a64bf20f53d378d4,
title = "Social and demographic drivers of trend and seasonality in elective abortions in Denmark",
abstract = "Background: Elective abortions show a secular decline in high income countries. That general pattern, however, may mask meaningful differences—and a potentially rising trend—among age, income, and other racial/ethnic groups. We explore these differences in Denmark, a high-income, low-fertility country with excellent data on terminations and births.Methods: We examined monthly elective abortions (n = 225,287) from 1995 to 2009, by maternal age, parity, income level and mother{\textquoteright}s country of origin. We applied time-series methods to live births as well as spontaneous and elective abortions to approximate the denominator of pregnancies at risk of elective abortion. We used linear regression methods to identify trend and seasonal patterns.Results: Despite an overall declining trend, teenage women show a rising proportion of pregnancies that end in an elective termination (56% to 67%, 1995 to 2009). Non-Western immigrant women also show a slight increase in incidence. Heightened economic disadvantage among non-Western immigrant women does not account for this rise. Elective abortions also show a sustained “summer peak” in June, July and August. Low-income women show the most pronounced summer peak.Conclusions: Identification of the causes of the increase over time in elective abortion among young women, and separately among non-Western immigrant women, represents key areas of further inquiry. The unexpected increase over time in elective abortions among teens and non-Western immigrants in Denmark may signal important social and cultural impediments to contraception. The summer peak in abortions among low-income women, moreover, conflicts with the conventional assumption that the social and demographic composition of mothers who electively end their pregnancy remains stable within a calendar year.",
keywords = "Elective abortion, Trend, Seasonality, Denmark, Time series",
author = "Bruckner, {Tim A.} and Mortensen, {Laust H.} and Catalano, {Ralph A.}",
year = "2017",
month = jul,
day = "4",
doi = "10.1186/s12884-017-1397-2",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "1--8",
journal = "B M C Pregnancy and Childbirth",
issn = "1471-2393",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Social and demographic drivers of trend and seasonality in elective abortions in Denmark

AU - Bruckner, Tim A.

AU - Mortensen, Laust H.

AU - Catalano, Ralph A.

PY - 2017/7/4

Y1 - 2017/7/4

N2 - Background: Elective abortions show a secular decline in high income countries. That general pattern, however, may mask meaningful differences—and a potentially rising trend—among age, income, and other racial/ethnic groups. We explore these differences in Denmark, a high-income, low-fertility country with excellent data on terminations and births.Methods: We examined monthly elective abortions (n = 225,287) from 1995 to 2009, by maternal age, parity, income level and mother’s country of origin. We applied time-series methods to live births as well as spontaneous and elective abortions to approximate the denominator of pregnancies at risk of elective abortion. We used linear regression methods to identify trend and seasonal patterns.Results: Despite an overall declining trend, teenage women show a rising proportion of pregnancies that end in an elective termination (56% to 67%, 1995 to 2009). Non-Western immigrant women also show a slight increase in incidence. Heightened economic disadvantage among non-Western immigrant women does not account for this rise. Elective abortions also show a sustained “summer peak” in June, July and August. Low-income women show the most pronounced summer peak.Conclusions: Identification of the causes of the increase over time in elective abortion among young women, and separately among non-Western immigrant women, represents key areas of further inquiry. The unexpected increase over time in elective abortions among teens and non-Western immigrants in Denmark may signal important social and cultural impediments to contraception. The summer peak in abortions among low-income women, moreover, conflicts with the conventional assumption that the social and demographic composition of mothers who electively end their pregnancy remains stable within a calendar year.

AB - Background: Elective abortions show a secular decline in high income countries. That general pattern, however, may mask meaningful differences—and a potentially rising trend—among age, income, and other racial/ethnic groups. We explore these differences in Denmark, a high-income, low-fertility country with excellent data on terminations and births.Methods: We examined monthly elective abortions (n = 225,287) from 1995 to 2009, by maternal age, parity, income level and mother’s country of origin. We applied time-series methods to live births as well as spontaneous and elective abortions to approximate the denominator of pregnancies at risk of elective abortion. We used linear regression methods to identify trend and seasonal patterns.Results: Despite an overall declining trend, teenage women show a rising proportion of pregnancies that end in an elective termination (56% to 67%, 1995 to 2009). Non-Western immigrant women also show a slight increase in incidence. Heightened economic disadvantage among non-Western immigrant women does not account for this rise. Elective abortions also show a sustained “summer peak” in June, July and August. Low-income women show the most pronounced summer peak.Conclusions: Identification of the causes of the increase over time in elective abortion among young women, and separately among non-Western immigrant women, represents key areas of further inquiry. The unexpected increase over time in elective abortions among teens and non-Western immigrants in Denmark may signal important social and cultural impediments to contraception. The summer peak in abortions among low-income women, moreover, conflicts with the conventional assumption that the social and demographic composition of mothers who electively end their pregnancy remains stable within a calendar year.

KW - Elective abortion

KW - Trend

KW - Seasonality

KW - Denmark

KW - Time series

U2 - 10.1186/s12884-017-1397-2

DO - 10.1186/s12884-017-1397-2

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28676084

VL - 17

SP - 1

EP - 8

JO - B M C Pregnancy and Childbirth

JF - B M C Pregnancy and Childbirth

SN - 1471-2393

M1 - 214

ER -

ID: 188226675