AI Article Synopsis

  • Research shows that high residential mobility has negative impacts, especially for women and young adults, but the reasons behind this are not well understood.
  • The study focuses on whether these effects are short-term disruptions from moving or long-term consequences due to repeated relocations.
  • Findings reveal that high residential mobility leads to lasting reductions in contraceptive use, largely due to decreased access to contraception, independent of any immediate impacts from individual moves.

Article Abstract

While research has demonstrated that high residential mobility has negative consequences for an array of outcomes, particularly among women and young adults, the mechanisms underlying these associations are unclear. The consequences of high residential mobility may be comprised solely of a series of short-term disruptions surrounding individual moves, or there may also be long-term, cumulative effects from repeated moves. High residential mobility may diminish access to resources as individuals move to different neighborhoods, impose a cognitive burden that impairs their ability to plan ahead, or decrease the relative power they have in their relationships to limit exposure to risk behaviors. We adjudicate between these possibilities by predicting the effects of high residential mobility on sexual intercourse and contraceptive use, the proximate determinants of pregnancy, during women's transition to adulthood. Using 2.5 years of monthly address data for 882 respondents in the Relationship Dynamics and Social Life study-a random sample of young women in Genesee County, Michigan-we find that high residential mobility is associated with long-term decreases in contraceptive use. These long-term consequences are independent of the short-term effects of individual moves and attributable to diminished contraceptive access. We disentangle the effects of home-leaving, which is distinct from subsequent moves.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9557177PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/socpro/spab009DOI Listing

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