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Fewer teenage births
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#146461
Teenage motherhood is less common in more equal societies
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Planet Under Pressure »
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3. Challenges to progress
3. Challenges to progress☜What are the main obstacles to the implementation of the options and opportunities identified as potential responses to the crisis?☜FFB597
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Income inequality makes it harder for societies to progress »
Income inequality makes it harder for societies to progress
Income inequality makes it harder for societies to progress☜Evidence suggests that large income inequalities within societies damage the social fabric and quality of life for everyone, and, in doing so, make it harder for societies to make the kind of significant and systemic social, environmental, and economic shift envisioned at the conference. ☜59C6EF
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Benefits of improving equality? »
Benefits of improving equality?
Benefits of improving equality?☜What are the societal impacts of improving equality?☜FFB597
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Fewer teenage births
Fewer teenage births☜Teenage motherhood is less common in more equal societies☜59C6EF
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[1]
More equal societies work better for everyone
Author:
Richard Wilkinson, Kate Pickett - The Equality Trust
Cited by:
David Price
7:56 PM 28 March 2012 GMT
URL:
http://www.equalitytrust.org.uk/why/evidence/teenage-births
Excerpt / Summary
One and a quarter million teenagers become pregnant each year in the rich OECD countries and about three quarters of a million go on to become teenage mothers. The differences in teen birth rates between countries are striking. In the USA the teenage birth rate is 52.1 per 1000 women aged 15-19, more than ten times higher than Japan, which has a rate of 4.6.
Babies born to teenage mothers are more likely to have low birth weight, to be born prematurely, to be at higher risk of dying in infancy and, as they grow up, to be at greater risk of educational failure, juvenile crime and becoming teenage parents themselves. Girls who give birth as teenagers are more likely to be poor and uneducated. Teenage motherhood is part of the inter-generational cycle of deprivation and social exclusion.
We have shown that teenage births are related to income inequality internationally in a study published in the American Journal of Public Health. Other researchers have shown the same association in the United States.
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David Price
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3/28/2012 6:01:00 PM
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