Volume 53 - Article 3 | Pages 47–82
Special times? How COVID-specific concerns disrupted fertility desires in the United States during the COVID-19 pandemic
By Yining Yang, Grace Kao
Abstract
Background: Despite growing research on fertility during COVID-19, the precise mechanisms underlying fertility responses to the pandemic remain poorly understood.
Objective: We specifically focus on COVID-19 mitigation policies and the health implications of COVID-19. We examine whether disruptions in fertility desires during COVID-19 can be attributed to material and emotional hardships – comparable to those observed in other crises – or if they are uniquely linked to broader concerns specific to the pandemic itself.
Methods: We used original data from a nationally representative longitudinal survey on well-being during COVID-19 in the United States (N = 2,433). We first conducted exploratory factor analysis to examine the underlying relationships between various views related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Then we employed multinomial logistic regression and linear regression models to examine how COVID-specific concerns and hardships were associated with fertility desires in late 2020 and late 2021.
Results: Material and emotional hardships were associated with less stable fertility desires in late 2020 and late 2021. However, generalized concerns related to the pandemic, including restrictions of daily activities due to social distancing and worries about contracting and spreading the virus, were associated with a decrease in fertility desires in late 2020, even after accounting for hardships. Suggestive evidence shows that these COVID-specific concerns remained negatively associated with fertility desires in late 2021.
Conclusions: Beyond material and emotional hardships brought by COVID-19, concerns surrounding the pandemic itself may have had a distinct impact on fertility desires.
Contribution: This study contributes to the mechanisms underlying fertility responses to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Author’s Affiliation
- Yining Yang - Yale University, United States of America EMAIL
 - Grace Kao - Yale University, United States of America EMAIL
 
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
            The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on mortality in Uruguay from 2020 to 2022
            
                Volume 51 - Article 29
                | Keywords: 
                    COVID-19,
                    excess mortality,
                    life expectancy,
                    Uruguay
        
            Lowest low fertility in Spain: Insights from the 2018 Spanish Fertility Survey
            
                Volume 51 - Article 19
                | Keywords: 
                    fertility desires,
                    low fertility,
                    Spain
        
            The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on women’s care work and employment in the Middle East and North Africa
            
                Volume 51 - Article 15
                | Keywords: 
                    care work,
                    COVID-19,
                    Middle East,
                    North Africa,
                    women's employment
        
            Trajectories of US parents’ divisions of domestic labor throughout the COVID-19 pandemic
            
                Volume 51 - Article 12
                | Keywords: 
                    childcare,
                    COVID-19,
                    division of labor,
                    fathers,
                    gender,
                    housework,
                    mothers
        
            Lessons from the pandemic: Gender inequality in childcare and the emergence of a gender mental health gap among parents in Germany
            
                Volume 51 - Article 3
                | Keywords: 
                    COVID-19,
                    division of childcare,
                    exhaustion,
                    gender role attitudes,
                    loneliness,
                    mental health,
                    pandemic,
                    stress
        
Cited References: 57
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar