Highly religious states have highest teen birth rates

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Highly religious states have highest teen birth rates

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Teen Birth Rates Higher in Highly Religious States
Jeanna Bryner
Senior Writer
LiveScience.com jeanna Bryner
senior Writer
livescience.com Wed Sep 16, 7:08 pm ET

U.S. states whose residents have more conservative religious beliefs on average tend to have higher rates of teenagers giving birth, a new study suggests.

The relationship could be due to the fact that communities with such religious beliefs (a literal interpretation of the Bible, for instance) may frown upon contraception, researchers say. If that same culture isn't successfully discouraging teen sex, the pregnancy and birth rates rise.

Mississippi topped the list for conservative religious beliefs and teen birth rates, according to the study results, which will be detailed in a forthcoming issue of the journal Reproductive Health. (See the full top 10 below.)

However, the results don't say anything about cause and effect, though study researcher Joseph Strayhorn of Drexel University College of Medicine and University of Pittsburgh offers a speculation of the most probable explanation: "We conjecture that religious communities in the U.S. are more successful in discouraging the use of contraception among their teenagers than they are in discouraging sexual intercourse itself."

The study comes with other significant caveats, too:

The same link might not be found for other types of religious beliefs that are perhaps more liberal, researchers say. And while the study reveals information about states as a whole, it doesn't shed light on whether an individual teen who is more religious will also be more likely to have a child.

"You can't talk about individuals, because you don't know what's producing the [teen birth] rate," said Amy Adamczyk, a sociologist at the City University of New York, who was not involved in the current study. "Are there just a couple of really precocious religious teenagers who are running around and getting pregnant and having all of these babies, but that's not the norm?"

Strayhorn agrees and says the study aimed to look at communities (or states) as a whole.

"It is possible that an anti-contraception attitude could be caused by religious cultures and that could exert its effect mainly on the non-religious individuals in the culture," Strayhorn told LiveScience. But, he added, "We don't know."

Bible states

Strayhorn compiled data from various data sets. The religiosity information came from a sample of nearly 36,000 participants who were part of the U.S. Religious Landscapes Survey by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life conducted in 2007, while the teen birth and abortion statistics came from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

For religiosity, the researchers averaged the percentage of respondents who agreed with conservative responses to eight statements, including: ''There is only one way to interpret the teachings of my religion," and ''Scripture should be taken literally, word for word."

They found a strong correlation between statewide conservative religiousness and statewide teen birth rate even when they accounted for income and abortion rates.

For instance, the results showed more abortions among teenagers in the less religious states, which would skew the findings since fewer teens in these states would have births. But even after accounting for the abortions, the study team still found a state's level of religiosity could predict their teen birth rate. The higher the religiosity, the higher was the teen birth rate on average.

John Santelli of the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University calls the study "well-done," adding that the results are not surprising.

"The index of religiosity is tapping into more fundamentalist religious belief," Santelli said. "I'm sure there are parts of New England that have very low teen birth rates, which have pretty high religious participation, but they're probably less conservative, less fundamentalist type of congregations."

Other factors that may have been important to consider include ethnic backgrounds of state residents, according to Adamczyk, the City University of New York sociologist.

"We know that African American women on average tend to underreport their abortions, which means they could also underreport the likelihood that they got pregnant," Adamczyk said. "If you're dealing with states with a high number of African American wome, you might run into that problem."

Adamczyk's own, separate research has shown a nearly opposite correlation, at the individual level. "What we find is that more religious women are less likely to engage in riskier sex behaviors, and as a result they are less likely to have a premarital pregnancy," Adamczyk said during a telephone interview. But for those religious teens who do choose to have premarital sex, they might be more likely to ditch their religious views and have an abortion, she has found.

Cause and effect?

Adamczyk says the idea that anti-contraception principles could be behind the link is controversial, as studies on the topic have varied results. "The idea is that in the heat of the moment, a young woman who has said, 'I'm going to be a virgin on my wedding night,' is with her boyfriend and she says 'Let's just do it.' And since they didn't plan it, nobody has a condom. And so it increases their chances of a pregnancy," Adamczyk said.

Earlier marriage among religious individuals could also partly explain the finding.

"In the south, there is a higher rate of marriage of teenagers. And one possible explanation is just that in the southern states, which are also more religious, people just get married earlier and have planned pregnancies and those have perfectly good outcomes," Strayhorn said. He added that he doesn't think the earlier marriage idea explains the religion-birth link.

Top 10 states with highest teen birth rates:
Mississippi New Mexico Texas Arkansas Arizona Oklahoma Nevada Tennessee Kentucky Georgia

Top 10 most conservatively religious states:
Mississippi Alabama South Carolina Tennessee Louisiana Utah Arkansas North Carolina Kentucky Oklahoma

* The Evolution of Religion
* The History and Future of Birth Control
* Religion News & Information

* Original Story: Teen Birth Rates Higher in Highly Religious States

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Re: Highly religious states have highest teen birth rates

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Haven't there been studies confirming this type of thing before? Not that these results are terribly surprising.
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Re: Highly religious states have highest teen birth rates

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I'd be interested to see these results cross-correlated with wealth, since as far as I know, poverty is a good predictor of teenage pregnancy as well. For example, Utah is counted among the most religious states, but it's also 12th in median income and doesn't appear in the top ten for teenage pregnancy. In fact, all five of the states that appear on both lists in this article--Mississippi, Tennessee, Arkansas, Kentucky, and Oklahoma--are in the bottom ten states for median income in the United States.
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Re: Highly religious states have highest teen birth rates

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So basically this could be a case of confounding with poverty causing both religious zeal and teen pregnancy? The best way to check it would be comparing places that are poor and more secular with places that are poor and more religious- just doing rich and religious versus rich and secular would still have problems.
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Re: Highly religious states have highest teen birth rates

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Samuel wrote:So basically this could be a case of confounding with poverty causing both religious zeal and teen pregnancy? The best way to check it would be comparing places that are poor and more secular with places that are poor and more religious- just doing rich and religious versus rich and secular would still have problems.
There's places that are poor and more secular? Like where? Poor states seem to have a tendency of being highly religious in general almost as a rule.
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Re: Highly religious states have highest teen birth rates

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General Zod wrote:
Samuel wrote:So basically this could be a case of confounding with poverty causing both religious zeal and teen pregnancy? The best way to check it would be comparing places that are poor and more secular with places that are poor and more religious- just doing rich and religious versus rich and secular would still have problems.
There's places that are poor and more secular? Like where? Poor states seem to have a tendency of being highly religious in general almost as a rule.

Admittedly this from a British point of view, but the area where I live is considerd an area of poverty and has extremely high levels of teenage pregnancy and its not exactly Bible-Thumpers-R-Us Territory.

Beeb
Teenage pregnancy rates increase

The number of teenage girls getting pregnant in Torbay has risen to its highest level since 1998, despite a campaign to reduce the figure.

The government had ordered the trust to bring the figure down to 22 per 1,000 in 2010.

But the numbers of pregnancies among girls under 18 in 2007 was 57 per 1,000 of the population, up from 44 in 1998.

There were 138 conceptions in 2007, up 16 on the number for 2006, according to Torbay NHS Care Trust.

The trust said it had set up a number of initiatives to bring down teenage pregnancy rates and was taking advice on "best practice" from other areas of the country.

Education call

Kim Fleming, from the trust, told BBC News: "We have been looking at young-people-friendly services so that young people feel OK about accessing these services."

There was increased access to contraception and the message to delay pregnancy was being spread in schools.

The highest rates of teenage pregnancies were in Torbay's more deprived areas.

Of the 138 conceptions in Torbay in 2007, more than half were terminated.

Torbay mother Natalie Hayes, 17, who gave birth to son Logan three weeks ago, said: "I didn't believe in abortion so I didn't get rid of him.

"I'm glad I didn't, but that's the choice some people make."

She said there was not enough sex education in schools.

"When I went to school they had no real sex education," she said.

"They should do a least a few lessons a week on it.

"You see kids getting pregnant in year nine."
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Re: Highly religious states have highest teen birth rates

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Dartzap wrote: Admittedly this from a British point of view, but the area where I live is considerd an area of poverty and has extremely high levels of teenage pregnancy and its not exactly Bible-Thumpers-R-Us Territory.
Yeah, I was more referring to places in the US. :P
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Re: Highly religious states have highest teen birth rates

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General Zod wrote:
Dartzap wrote: Admittedly this from a British point of view, but the area where I live is considerd an area of poverty and has extremely high levels of teenage pregnancy and its not exactly Bible-Thumpers-R-Us Territory.
Yeah, I was more referring to places in the US. :P
I know but you should always be specific :P
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Re: Highly religious states have highest teen birth rates

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Same in Germany. The south is both, richer and more religous than the north and the east.
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Re: Highly religious states have highest teen birth rates

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Dartzap wrote:
General Zod wrote:
Dartzap wrote: Admittedly this from a British point of view, but the area where I live is considerd an area of poverty and has extremely high levels of teenage pregnancy and its not exactly Bible-Thumpers-R-Us Territory.
Yeah, I was more referring to places in the US. :P
I know but you should always be specific :P
Given the OP was specifically researching the US, and I said "poor states" in my post I would have thought it was obvious where I was referring.
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Re: Highly religious states have highest teen birth rates

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Samuel wrote:So basically this could be a case of confounding with poverty causing both religious zeal and teen pregnancy? The best way to check it would be comparing places that are poor and more secular with places that are poor and more religious- just doing rich and religious versus rich and secular would still have problems.
According to the article, the effect persisted even after accounting for poverty:
They found a strong correlation between statewide conservative religiousness and statewide teen birth rate even when they accounted for income and abortion rates.
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