Abstract
A longitudinal analysis of the reproductive behavior of a sample of Catholics who were participants in the 1965 NFS and reinterviewed in 1969 is reported in this paper. Fertility over the period studied varied systematically with the additional number of children intended in 1965. In addition, this study has documented a predictive role for method of contraception and the experience of premarital pregnancy. Women using less effective methods and those premaritally pregnant had higher fertility over the interval net of controls for other variables in the analysis, including life-cycle stage and 1965 intentions. Surprisingly, the planning status of the last pregnancy before 1965 was not found to have any independent association with subsequent fertility. © 1973 Population Association of America.
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CITATION STYLE
Wilson, F. D., & Bumpass, L. (1973). The prediction of fertility among catholics: A longitudinal analysis. Demography, 10(4), 591–597. https://doi.org/10.2307/2060885
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