mother buying diapers

The Effects of Unintended Pregnancy on Children

ISR, PSC

Project Summary

Martha Bailey, Vanessa Lang

This project builds on the Michigan Contraceptive Access Research and Evaluation Study (M-CARES) to evaluate the long-term effects of mothers’ access to free contraceptives and reductions in unintended pregnancies on their children’s well-being.

M-CARES uses a randomized control trial design to assess the effects of providing free contraception to mothers on their children born before the intervention. The population subject to intervention is fecund women age 18-35 years at risk of pregnancy and who are clients at Planned Parenthood clinics of Michigan (PPMI), who meet income eligibility criteria, and who would otherwise pay out-of-pocket for services on the day of recruitment (i.e., lacking insurance coverage for received service). The experimental (treatment) condition is a mother’s receipt of a voucher providing access to no-cost contraception (up to the price of a name-brand intrauterine device) for 100 days. The control group of mothers receives no voucher. All enrolled women complete a two-part baseline survey and consent to be re-contacted for two follow-up interviews in outgoing years. They also complete a two-part baseline survey and consent to be re-contacted for two follow up interviews in outgoing years. In addition, mothers consent to linkages to their own and their children’s administrative data from records held by state and federal health, education, criminal justice, and tax records. Consent covers children already born to women at the time of intervention and children born after intervention. Survey and administrative data provide outcome measures to assess children’s well-being and development up to age 18. The study will compare children of mothers who receive the intervention to those who did not.

ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04371900 History of Changes
Other Study ID Numbers: HUM00132909B

Actual Study Start Date  : August 26, 2018
Estimated Primary Completion Date  : March 31, 2023
Estimated Study Completion Date  : December 31, 2031

Investigators

Vanessa Lang, Martha J Bailey

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