Paper Example Undergraduate 1,057 words

Pregnancy Outcome and the Time Required for Next Conception

Last reviewed: December 12, 2011 ~6 min read
Abstract

This work reviews a single article on the issue of pregnancy interval and discusses the topic, methods, results and adds a conclusion where the writer disagrees with the manner in which the interval is determined for multiple pregnancies among the same women as apposed to most recent and current pregnancy to eliminate possible bias.

Pregnancy outcome and the time required for next conception, Jain (1969) looks at a large group of presumably fertile women and seeks to determine the average age of conception after a previous pregnancy or the length of time between pregnancies in the absence of birth control. According to the study the average length of time between pregnancies remains high in those under the age of 20, then levels out to spike again in individual women according to advancing age. Additionally the outcome of the pregnancy was also considered, where those who had live births ending the pregnancy or fetal death via natural or artificial means also experienced shortened pregnancy intervals, though higher among ages less than 20 and which gradually increases with maternal age.

Hypotehsis

The paper hypothesis surrounds an empirical exploration to add to the knowledge base regarding the length of pregnancy interval by age of women and to help provide an inferred length of amenorrhea among these same women all in the absence of contraception, with the assumption that in the absence of contraception the natural pregnancy interval will be determined.

Statistical Methodology

The methodology employed is demonstrative of a simple mean and variance report, where the average was determined and then a variance among all participants was determined. The mean is determined in this study by adding all the interval lengths in months of all the participants and then dividing by the number of participants to determine the average between them. The mean is then calculated based on both maternal age as well as the outcome of the pregnancy i.e. live birth, termination of pregnancy and infant death at birth, prior to one year of age and after one year of age. The variance is determined by finding the square of the standard deviation, which is the square root of the variance. The sample is derived from a 2,443 sample of surveyed individual married women who recorded their pregnancy histories prior to beginning a family planning program, in Taichung (Taiwan) known as the Intensive Fertility Survey (1962). The sample are then weeded out by eliminating the data associated with those who reported any contraception use (only about 7%). (422) Additionally the researchers then further reduce the statistical analysis data by eliminating the first pregnancy interval or the time it took from marriage to first pregnancy end, as well as the last (open)pregnancy interval the last pregnancy end to the survey time so as not to skew the data unnecessarily. The work also notes two statistical biases that are significant for obtaining accurate data and then attempts to account for them statistically, a truncation bias where the researchers believed that the collective data of all women irrespective of age would bias the results, to account for this possible bias the researchers offered statistical analysis of two methods of data analysis. One where the interval determination was the same for all participants and one where the age was measured at the beginning of pregnancy intervals for age groups less than 20 and 20-24 and at the end of pregnancy intervals for the age groups 25-29,30-34 and 35-39. (424-425) The second potential bias discussed is a memory bias, associated with the inability of individuals to remember pregnancy intervals from the past especially when reporting fetal deaths from the past and the researcher assumes this bias will be greater for the older participants than the younger (423).

Results

The results of the study indicate that the mean pregnancy interval was 16 months in the absence of contraception. The researchers go on to state that this number was greatly affected by the outcome of the preceding pregnancy, where pregnancies that resulted in live birth and an infant that survived to one year the interval was 17 months. Additionally, if the preceding pregnancy ended in fetal death prior to one year the following pregnancy interval was shortened by 6 months. The work then goes on to statistically compare the two methods of age classification and the statistical comparison between the various ages, which included a high pregnancy interval in the less than 20 age group that then declined again in the 20-24 age group and gradually increased in the remaining age groups 25-29,30-34 and 35-39. (424-430) Finally, the researcher then attempts to conclude the statistical data on the length of amenorrhea following pregnancy termination. (430-433)

Conclusion

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PaperDue. (2011). Pregnancy Outcome and the Time Required for Next Conception. PaperDue. https://www.paperdue.com/essay/pregnancy-outcome-and-the-time-required-115584

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