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Resumen de You have full text access to this contentThe influence of social-developmental context and nurse visitation intervention on self-agency change in unmarried adolescent mothers

Janiece E. DeSocio, Margaret L. Holland, Harriet J. Kitzman, Robert E. Cole

  • Pregnancy among unmarried adolescents has been linked to negative personal control beliefs. In contrast, self-agency beliefs about control over future possibilities have been linked to delay in subsequent childbearing. In this secondary analysis, we examined factors associated with self-agency change in 429 unmarried adolescent mothers from intervention and control groups of a nurse home visitation study. Adolescent mothers who participated in a sustained relationship with a nurse made greater gains in self-agency than did control group mothers (p ¼ .034). Adolescents with lower cognitive ability who were behind their age-appropriate grade level in school made the greatest self-agency gains.


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