The goal of our project is to understand processes of family formation in relation to career trajectories among young adults, and the consequences of family formation behaviors for health outcomes in young adulthood. With four waves of Add Health data, this project examines how early experiences and investments in romantic relationships and education during adolescence initiate trajectories that extend into adulthood and influence key decisions about family formation and career development in the 20s. Unique data that are not available in any other national data set are used, including involvement in romantic relationships during adolescence and new Add Health educational data on curriculum and academic intensity from high school transcripts. We first document patterns and differentials of family formation and career development among young adult men and women and across socioeconomic, race, ethnic, and immigrant groups. With a life course perspective, we draw on theories of socialization and opportunity structures to define the important mechanisms of influence within the three domains of context, biology, and behavior that operate in family formation trajectories. Their effects are then integrated in a dynamic longitudinal model of the determinants of family formation in young adulthood, including marriage, cohabitation, and marital and nonmarital childbearing. We use innovative methods to analyze the simultaneous decisions involved in processes of family formation and contribute to knowledge about how adolescent experiences and development are linked to behavior in young adulthood. Finally, we examine key hypotheses about the impact of union status and early nonmarital childbearing on mental health and stress outcomes, exploiting new biological data at Wave IV, as well as repeated measures of mental health over the four interview waves in Add Health.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01HD031921-14
Application #
7756640
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Project Start
2009-01-01
Project End
2010-12-31
Budget Start
2009-01-01
Budget End
2009-12-31
Support Year
14
Fiscal Year
2009
Total Cost
$777,150
Indirect Cost
Name
University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
Department
Type
DUNS #
608195277
City
Chapel Hill
State
NC
Country
United States
Zip Code
27599
Guzzo, Karen Benjamin; Hayford, Sarah R (2018) Adolescent Reproductive and Contraceptive Knowledge and Attitudes and Adult Contraceptive Behavior. Matern Child Health J 22:32-40
Fish, Jessica N; Pollitt, Amanda M; Schulenberg, John E et al. (2018) Measuring alcohol use across the transition to adulthood: Racial/ethnic, sexual identity, and educational differences. Addict Behav 77:193-202
King, Valarie; Boyd, Lisa M; Pragg, Brianne (2018) Parent-Adolescent Closeness, Family Belonging, and Adolescent Well-Being Across Family Structures. J Fam Issues 39:2007-2036
Pollard, Michael S; Tucker, Joan S; Green, Harold D et al. (2018) Adolescent peer networks and the moderating role of depressive symptoms on developmental trajectories of cannabis use. Addict Behav 76:34-40
Andrea, Sarah B; Messer, Lynne C; Marino, Miguel et al. (2018) Associations of Tipped and Untipped Service Work With Poor Mental Health in a Nationally Representative Cohort of Adolescents Followed Into Adulthood. Am J Epidemiol 187:2177-2185
Goings, Trenette Clark; Hidalgo, Sebastian Teran; Howard, Matthew O (2018) Cigarette-smoking trajectories of monoracial and biracial Blacks: Testing the intermediate hypothesis. Am J Orthopsychiatry 88:354-362
van Draanen, Jenna; Prelip, Michael; Upchurch, Dawn M (2018) Consumption of fast food, sugar-sweetened beverages, artificially-sweetened beverages and allostatic load among young adults. Prev Med Rep 10:212-217
Hartge, Joseph; Toledo, Patricia (2018) Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and its Comorbid Mental Disorders: An Evaluation of their Labor Market Outcomes. J Ment Health Policy Econ 21:105-121
Samari, Goleen; Coleman-Minahan, Kate (2018) Parental Gender Expectations by Socioeconomic Status and Nativity: Implications for Contraceptive Use. Sex Roles 78:669-684
Nagata, Jason M; Garber, Andrea K; Tabler, Jennifer L et al. (2018) Prevalence and Correlates of Disordered Eating Behaviors Among Young Adults with Overweight or Obesity. J Gen Intern Med 33:1337-1343

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