grant

Leveraging Medical Records to Understand the Underreporting of Abortion Before and After Dobbs

Organization UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELESLocation LOS ANGELES, UNITED STATESPosted 21 Sept 2024Deadline 20 Sept 2026
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY20250-11 years oldActive Follow-upAgeAttitudeBehaviorBiologicalBlackBlack raceCannot achieve a pregnancyCategoriesCenters for Disease ControlCenters for Disease Control and PreventionCenters for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S.)ChildChild YouthChildren (0-21)ChillsChronologic Fetal MaturityCoercionContraceptive AgentsContraceptivesDataData CollectionData SourcesDifficulty conceivingDomestic ViolenceEconomic IncomeEconomical IncomeEthnic OriginEthnicityEvaluation StudiesExploratory/Developmental GrantFaceFailureFamilyFemaleFemale HealthFetal AgeFutureGeneralized GrowthGenerationsGestationGestational AgeGoalsGrantGrowthHealthHispanicHouseholdImpoverishedIncidenceIncomeIndividualInfertilityInstitutionInvestigatorsKnowledgeLatinaLongitudinal SurveysMaternal HealthMaternal and Child HealthMeasurementMeasuresMedical RecordsMental HealthMental HygieneMethodsMichiganMothersNational Longitudinal Survey of YouthParticipantPatientsPoliciesPopulationPovertyPregnancyProcessProviderPsychological HealthPublic PolicyPublishingR21 MechanismR21 ProgramRaceRacesReportingReproductive HealthResearchResearch PersonnelResearchersRespondentSampling StudiesSubgroupSurvey InstrumentSurveysTimeTissue GrowthUnited StatesUnited States Centers for Disease ControlUnited States Centers for Disease Control and PreventionUnited States Supreme CourtViolenceVotingVulnerable PopulationsWomanWomen's Healthabortionactive followupadolescent healthagesbear childrenbearing childrenbiologicbirth controlchild bearingchildbearingcost effectivecourtdata resourceexploratory developmental studyfacesfacialfertility cessationfertility lossfollow upfollow-upfollowed upfollowuphealth organizationimprovedincomesinfertileinnovateinnovationinnovativekidsontogenyphysical conditioningphysical healthracialracial backgroundracial originresearch studyresponsesocialstatisticssubstance usesubstance usingviolentviolent behaviorvulnerable groupvulnerable individualvulnerable peopleyoungster
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Full Description

ABSTRACT
Dobbs v. Jackson’s Women’s Health Organization, the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2022 reversal of Roe v. Wade, is

the most consequential policy change for maternal and child health in a generation. At the time of submitting this

grant, abortion had been banned or severely restricted in sixteen states, and efforts to impose additional bans

and restrictions are in process in other states. Existing data limit more detailed analysis of who has abortions

and the potential consequences of Dobbs for maternal and child health. The overarching goal of this exploratory

proposal is to use a unique and powerful data resource to characterize the underreporting of abortion, develop

new methods to improve estimates of abortion incidence, and facilitate more research on the consequences of

Dobbs in national survey data. Our specific aims are to (1) document the individual-level determinants of abortion

underreporting in surveys by comparing abortions measured in medical records to survey responses for the

same individuals using a unique sample of study participants; (2) examine how abortion reporting in surveys

changed after the Dobbs decision; and (3) explore the potential to improve national and subgroup estimates

regarding the incidence of abortion in national surveys using evidence from aims (1) and (2). Achieving these

aims will allow researchers to refine national survey estimates of abortion and understand the broader context

in which these decisions occur. The proposed research will also inform a broader and deeper understanding of

the disproportionate incidence of abortion bans or restrictions in the aftermath of Dobbs. The data underlying

this proposal have already been collected and cleaned, making the proposed research highly cost effective.

Grant Number: 5R21HD115336-02
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Martha Bailey

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