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Journal ArticleDOI

Human Fertility: the basic components

Henri Leridon, +1 more
- 01 Jun 1978 - 
- Vol. 4, Iss: 2, pp 358
TLDR
Leridon as mentioned in this paper integrated biology and demography to investigate human fertility, both natural and controlled, and formulated the first coherent overview of the functioning of the human reproductive system in relation to the external conditions that affect fertility.
Abstract
In this innovative and comprehensive work, expanded by one-third for the English-language edition, Henri Leridon integrates biology and demography to investigate human fertility, both natural and controlled. Traditionally, demographers have been concerned with birthrates in different populations under varying conditions, while biologists have limited themselves to the study of the reproductive process. Leridon has formulated the first coherent overview of the functioning of the human reproductive system in relation to the external conditions that affect fertility. The book begins with a readable, authoritative review of human fertility in its natural state. Leridon summarizes and evaluates current knowledge, drawing together rare statistical data on physiological variables as well as demographic treatments of these data. After discussing the classical framework used by demographers, Leridon undertakes a "microdemographic" analysis in which he focuses on the individual and explicates the biological processes through which social, psychological, and economic factors affect fertility. He isolates its components fecundability, intrauterine mortality, the physiological nonsusceptible period, and sterility then reviews the composite effect of variation in any one component. Leridon considers situations of controlled fertility: contraception, abortion, and sterilization. The author also presents valuable new data from his own investigations of varying risks of intrauterine mortality. Finally, he shows how the previous approaches can be complemented by the use of mathematical models."

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Incidence of Early Loss of Pregnancy

TL;DR: The total rate of pregnancy loss after implantation, including clinically recognized spontaneous abortions, was 31 percent and most of the 40 women with unrecognized early pregnancy losses had normal fertility, since 95 percent of them subsequently became clinically pregnant within two years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disparities in rates of unintended pregnancy in the United States, 1994 and 2001.

TL;DR: The rate of unintended pregnancy in 2001 was substantially above average among women aged 18-24, unmarried (particularly cohabiting) women, low-income women, women who had not completed high school and minority women, but increased among poor and less educated women.
Journal ArticleDOI

Unintended pregnancy in the United States.

TL;DR: Rates of unintended pregnancy have declined, probably as a result of higher contraceptive prevalence and use of more effective methods, and efforts to achieve further decreases should focus on reducing risky behavior, promoting the use of effective contraceptive methods and improving the effectiveness with which all methods are used.
Journal ArticleDOI

A framework for analyzing the proximate determinants of fertility

TL;DR: In this article, a more detailed analysis may show that among educated women marriage is relatively late or the use of contraception more frequent, thus clarifying the relationship between education and fertility.
Journal ArticleDOI

The variability of female reproductive ageing

TL;DR: Age at last birth in natural fertility populations, which marks the end of female fertility, shows an identically wide variation as age at menopause, but occurs on average 10 years earlier than this, given the high heritability for age atMenopause.
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