The Population Level Impacts of Differential Fertility Behavior of Parents of Children with Autism - Incite at Columbia University
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Work
The Population Level Impacts of Differential Fertility Behavior of Parents of Children with Autism
- Published August 10, 2015
- Authors Peter Bearman Ka-Yuet Liu Kinga Makovi Alix Winter
- Category Paper
- Forum Sociological Science
- Link doi.org
Drawing on population level data of exceptional quality (including detailed diagnostic information on the autism status of sibling pairs of over 3 million different mothers), this study confirms that stoppage is the average fertility response to a child born with autism, thereby reducing observed concordance in sibling pairs and leading to potentially biased estimation of genetic contributions to autism etiology. Using a counterfactual framework and applying matching techniques we show, however, that this average effect is composed of very different responses to suspicion of autism depending on birth cohort, the character of the disorder (severe versus less severe), the gender of the child, poverty status, and parental education. This study also sheds light on when parents suspect autism. We find that parents’ fertility behavior changes relative to matched controls very early after the birth of a child who will later be diagnosed with autism.
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go to The Spread of Autism Diagnosis
The Spread of Autism DiagnosisStudying the impact of diffusion of knowledge on the increasing prevalence of autism. Funded by the National Institutes of Health
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go to Understanding Autism
Understanding AutismUnderstanding the factors that have led to an increase in autism prevalence over the last four decades. Funded by the National Institutes of Health
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