Abstract
In 2006, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention launched an initiative to address the health of women of childbearing age in the United States—a preconception care campaign to improve fetal and maternal health in the country by targeting interventions on parents, and largely women, before conception occurs. In The Zero Trimester: Pre-Pregnancy Care and the Politics of Reproductive Risk, sociologist Miranda Waggoner uses this campaign as an entry point to address the emergence and widespread acceptance of preconception care and its political consequences in the United States. Throughout the book, Waggoner interrogates how preconception care extends assumptions that the onus for children’s health falls...