Public Perception of Female Fertility
Article:
Jensen, R. E., Martins, N., & Parks, M. M. (2018). Public perception of female fertility: Initial fertility, peak fertility, and age-related infertility among U.S. adults. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 47, 1507-1516. doi:10.1007/s10508-018-1197-4
Synopsis:
Perceptions of fertility are thought to impact reproductive behaviors, yet little
is known about how lay people conceptualize the female fertility timeline. In this
research, Professor Robin Jensen and colleagues surveyed 990 U.S. adults to map perceptions
of the female fertility timeline. Although there is no scientific consensus on the
makeup of the female fertility timeline, results from this research indicate that
the U.S. public posits fertility onset at (approximately) 13 years, peak fertility
at 22, ideal first pregnancy age at 23, too late for pregnancy at 46, and infertility
at 49. Regression analysis revealed that perceived peak fertility and ideal pregnancy
age were positively correlated such that participants perceived the ideal pregnancy
age as directly following peak fertility. Education was significantly related to fertility
perceptions; those with more education perceived initial fertility to be lower and
peak fertility and ideal pregnancy age to be higher. In other words, more highly educated
individuals perceived fertility to manifest over a longer period of time as compared
to individuals with less education. Black and Hispanic participants and participants
with lower income perceived ideal first pregnancy age as significantly lower than
did White participants and participants with higher income. These differences may
suggest that the seeds of health disparities associated with phenomena such as adolescent
pregnancy are lurking in fertility timeline perceptions.
PERCEIVED FERTILITY TIMELINE FOR PARTICIPANTS. Numbers represent mean ages for each fertility question with 95% confidence intervals in parentheses. For example, the mean for initial fertility was 13.23 years with a confidence interval of 13.00 and 13.46.