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Social status and season of birth: a study of a metropolitan area in the southeastern United States
Authors:C W Warren  C W Tyler
Abstract:An analysis of live birth statistics obtained from the Health Department of Fulton County, Georgia for 1967-1977 indicated that seasonal variation in birth was significantly related to maternal social status. Mothers were assigned to social status classification on the basis of whether they lived in an upper, upper middle, lower middle, or lower socioeconomic census tract. Periodic regression analysis and analysis of variance was applied to the data. Specific findings were 1) upper status groups showed no significant variation in births; 2) upper and lower middle classes showed a similar and a significant degree of seasonal variation with depressed birth levels from January-June and elevated levels from July-December; 3) lower class birth patterns showed more seasonal variation than the other classes; 4) the periodic curve accounted for 92.3% of the monthly variation in births for the lower class, 70.6% for the lower middle class, and 64.6% for the upper middle class; 5) the relationship between social status and seasonal variation in births held for both whites and non-whites; 6) seasonal variations were somewhat more marked for non-whites than for white in the lower and lower middle class; and 7) the observed relationship held throughout the 11 year period of observation. The results were of special concern given previous studies which found that children born in September-October entered school on the average earlier than other children and did less well in school than other students. Major findings were presented in graphic and tabular form.
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