
Fertility,
Contraception, and Fatherhood: Data on Men and Women from the National
Survey of Family Growth
For
Immediate Release:
May 31, 2006
Contact: CDC
National Center for Health Statistics Press Office
(301) 458-4800 or E-mail:
nchsquery@cdc.gov
Fertility, Contraception, and Fatherhood: Data from the 2002 National
Survey of Family Growth. Series Report 23, Number 26.
(PHS) 2006-1978.
246 pp.
View/download PDF 1.6 MB
The Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention has issued a comprehensive report on fertility,
contraception, and fatherhood indicators among men 15-44 years of age in
the United States. The data are from the National Survey of Family Growth
conducted in 2002. It’s the latest survey of this type, and--for the first
time--this large-scale, nationwide survey includes men. Whenever
appropriate, the findings for men and women are contrasted. Men’s and
women’s reproductive experiences vary significantly, and often sharply, by
characteristics such as education, income, and Hispanic origin and race.
Teen
fathers - Among non-Hispanic black fathers, 25 percent fathered their
first child before they were 20 years old; 19 percent of Hispanic fathers
also became fathers as teenagers, and 11 percent of non-Hispanic white men
became fathers while they were teens.
Nonmarital
childbearing – About one-half of the men without a high school
education have fathered a child outside of marriage compared with about 6
percent among college graduates.
Child
support – About three-quarters of the 28 million men who have children
(under age 19) live with those children. Among fathers who live apart from
their children, 85 percent of fathers with higher incomes contributed to
their children’s support on a regular basis, compared with 64 percent of
fathers with income below the poverty level.
Marriage
and divorce - A third of men marry by age 25; almost two-thirds marry
by age 30. Among women, one-half are married by the time they are 25 and
three-quarters by age 30. Overall, men marry later in life than women. The
average woman marries a man 2 years older than she. One-half of the men
who married as teenagers were divorced or separated within 10 years,
compared with 17 percent of men who married at 26 years or over.
Sexual
activity - Men who did not live with both parents at age 14 were more
likely to have had sexual intercourse during the teenage years (19 or
younger) compared with those who lived with both parents at age 14. |