How Does Access to Health Care Affect Teen Fertility and High School Dropout Rates? Evidence from School-Based Health Centers

Working Paper: NBER ID: w22030

Authors: Michael F. Lovenheim; Randall Reback; Leigh Wedenoja

Abstract: Children from low-income families face persistent barriers to accessing high-quality health care services. Previous research studies have examined the importance of expanding children's health insurance coverage, but there is little prior evidence concerning the impacts of directly expanding primary health care access to this population. We address this gap in the literature by exploring whether teenagers' access to primary health care influences their fertility and educational attainment. We study how the significant expansion of school-based health centers (SBHCs) in the United States since the early 1990's has affected teen fertility and high school dropout rates. Our results indicate that school-based health centers have a negative effect on teen birth rates: adding services equivalent to the average SBHC reduces the 15-18 year old birth rate by 5%. The effects are largest among younger teens and among African Americans and Hispanics. However, primary care health services do not reduce high school dropout rates by very much despite the sizable reductions in teen birth rates

Keywords: health care access; teen fertility; high school dropout; school-based health centers

JEL Codes: H75; I14; I21; J13


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
SBHC service levels (I19)teen birth rates (J13)
presence of SBHCs (I19)teen birth rates (J13)
presence of SBHCs (I19)high school dropout rates (I21)

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