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Chapter 10 Planning for Children. Do You Want to Have Children?. Pronatalism : attitude encouraging childbearing Family, friends, and religions encourage childbearing. Hispanics have the highest fertility rate of any racial or ethnic category. The tax structure supports parenthood.
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Do You Want to Have Children? • Pronatalism: attitude encouraging childbearing • Family, friends, and religions encourage childbearing. • Hispanics have the highest fertility rate of any racial or ethnic category. • The tax structure supports parenthood.
How Many Children Do You Want? • Procreative liberty: the freedom to decide whether or not to have children • An increasing number of women are choosing to be child-free. • Antinatalism: a negative perspective about children; opposition to having children
How Many? • Only 3% of adults view one child as the ideal family size. • The most preferred family size in the U.S. is the two-child family. • Religion has a strong influence on the number of children.
How Many? • Among affluence couples, four children may be the new norm. • Competitive birthing: pattern in which a woman wants to have as many children as her peers
Teenage Motherhood Teens have babies for a variety of reasons including limited parental supervision, not understanding the importance of contraception, and wanting someone to love.
Teenage Motherhood Problems associated with teenage motherhood: • Stigmatization and marginalization • Poverty • Poor health habits • Lower academic achievement
Infertility Infertility: the inability to achieve a pregnancy after at least one year of regular sexual relations without birth control, or the inability to carry a pregnancy to a live birth
Infertility • Fertilization: conception; the fusion of egg and sperm • Pregnancy: begins when the fertilized egg is implanted in uterine wall 5 to 7 days after fertilization • Forty percent of infertility problems are attributable to the woman, 40% to the man, and 20% to both of them.
Infertility Assisted reproductive technology includes: • Hormone therapy: using drugs to stimulate ovulation • Artificial insemination: sperm from male partner or donor is placed directly into the cervix • Surrogate mother: another woman artificially inseminated
Infertility • In vitro fertilization: egg is fertilized in small tube and implanted in mother’s uterine wall • Cryopreservation: procedure by which fertilized eggs are frozen and implanted at a later time • The typical success rate for infertile couples who want to give birth is 28%. • The cost of a successful outcome is over $60,000.
Planning for Adoption • Those who adopt are typically white, educated, and high income. • Adoptees are increasingly placed in nontraditional homes.
Adoption • Adoptees in the highest demand are healthy, white infants. • Couples are increasingly open to cross-racial adoptions. • Adopting from the U.S. foster care system is generally the least expensive type of adoption.
Adoption • Transracial adoption: the practice of parents adopting children of another race. • Transracial adoption is controversial.
Adoption • Another controversy is whether adopted children should be allowed to obtain information about their biological parents. • The benefits of an open adoption include the opportunity for the biological parents to stay involved and adoptive parents have genetic information about their child.
Foster Parenting • Foster parent: a person who either alone or with a spouse takes care of and fosters a child taken into custody • Foster parents are licensed by the state. • The goal of placing children in foster care is to improve their living conditions and then either return them to the parents or find another permanent home for them.
Abortion • Induced abortion: the deliberate termination of a pregnancy through chemical or surgical means • Spontaneous abortion: miscarriage or unintended termination of a pregnancy
Abortion • About 1.2 million abortions are performed annually in the U.S. • Abortion rate: the number of abortions per 1,000 women ages 15 to 44. • The abortion rate increased slightly between 2005-2008. • Abortion ratio: the number of abortions per 1,000 live births
Abortion • Parental consent: woman needs permission from parent to get an abortion if she is under a certain age • Parental notification: woman is required to tell her parents if she is under a certain age • Laws regarding consent and notification vary by state.
Abortion • Reasons for abortion include: • Interference with education or work • Not able to afford a child • Had completed child bearing • Not ready to have a child • Therapeutic abortion: an abortion performed to protect the life or health of a woman
Abortion Pro-life arguments: • Unborn fetus has a right to live. • Abortion is a violent and immoral solution. • The life of the fetus is sacred. Pro-Choice arguments: • Freedom of choice is a central value. • Those who bear the burden have the right to make the choice. • Procreation should be free of governmental control.
Abortion • Legal abortions, performed under safe medical conditions, are physically safer than continuing a pregnancy. • There are possible physical complications that become more likely for late term abortions.
Abortion • The American Psychological Association has not found significant psychological risks to an abortion. • Researchers found that most men were happy about their partner’s decision to have an abortion.