Search:
  Child Poverty Child Welfare Early Childhood Development Education Fatherhood and Parenting Health  
  Indicators of Child Well-Being Marriage and Family Positive Development School Readiness Teen Sex and Pregnancy Youth Development  
     Home
     About Us
     Research Areas
     Research Experts
     News
     DataBank
     Publications
     What Works
     Contact Us

     Information For
     Program Providers Portal
     Policy Community Portal
     Researchers and Educators Portal
     Media Portal

     Subscribe to our E-Newsletter
      
      Go
     Follow Child Trends on Twitter
     Bookmark and Share
                                                                                                              April 1, 2009
 
Ten Reasons to Refocus National Attention on Teen Childbearing 
 
Seven years ago, when the teen birth rate had been decreasing for more than a decade, Child Trends reminded the public that teen childbearing was still a serious problem in the United States, releasing Ten Reasons to Keep the Focus on Teen Childbearing.  With news last month from the federal government that the teen birth rate increased for a second year in a row, Child Trends releases Ten Reasons to Still Keep the Focus on Teen Childbearing
 
The brief enumerates ten important research-based findings that underscore why we cannot afford to lose focus on the need to reduce the relatively high rates of teenage childbearing in the U.S.  Among the findings: 
  • The human costs associated with teen childbearing are substantial, both for the children and for their parents.
  • The financial costs of teen childbearing are stark.
  •  Most teens who give birth did not intend to have a baby.

"Recent trends and high teen birth rates among vulnerable populations show the need to keep the focus on this issue," said Jennifer Manlove, Ph.D., one of the report's authors.

RELATED WORK FROM CHILD TRENDS:
 
 
 
 

Employment Opportunities | Site Map  |  Privacy Statement  | Contact Us     
© Copyright 2010 Child Trends ~- All Rights Reserved
Child Trends is a Nonprofit, Nonpartisan Research Center
4301 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Suite 350, Washington, DC 20008 ~ Phone: (202) 572-6000 ~ Fax: (202) 362-8420

 
Child Trends