Anna Rybinska - Center for Child and Family Policy Duke University

Connections between Birth Order, Birth Spacing, and Child Maltreatment: Population-Level Estimates

    Date:  09/09/2021 (Thu)

    Time:  3:30pm- 5:00pm

    Location:  This seminar will be held remotely via Zoom. (Please sign in to see the link.)

    Organizer:  Laura Satterfield


Meeting Schedule: (Not currently open for scheduling. Please contact the seminar organizer listed above.)

    All meetings will be held in the same location as the seminar unless otherwise noted.

    3:30pm - Seminar Presentation (3:30pm to 5:00pm)


    Additional Comments:  Short birth spacing, a birth-to-conception interval of under 18 months, is common in the United States, with over one third of all second or higher order children conceived under 18 months after the birth of their older sibling. While associations between short birth spacing and adverse health outcomes immediately post-birth are well-documented, the linkages between short birth intervals and long-term child well-being remain understudied. In addition, studies linking birth spacing to long-term child health rarely account for birth order. In this talk, I outline a program of research to fill this research gap and examine connections between birth spacing and order and child health, focusing on the risk of abuse and neglect in early childhood. Using birth records data in North Carolina for the past 25 years linked to multiple administrative data sources, I estimate the probability of child maltreatment investigations within the first five years of life by family size and birth-to-conception interval. I also evaluate whether current recommendations for birth spacing are relevant for child maltreatment prevention and identify sub-populations at the highest risk of child maltreatment following short birth spacing. My findings offer a nuanced view of how family size and birth intervals can affect child well-being as well as a critical consideration of the role that poverty plays in driving such associations.