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Women are Having More Children, New Report Shows by Unknown
Women in the United States are having more children than at any time in
almost 30 years, according to the latest Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) birth statistics released in February 2002 by HHS Secretary Tommy G.
Thompson. At the same time, Secretary Thompson said that births to teens
continue to decline.
In 2000, the average number of children born to women over a lifetime was
2.1, according to a new CDC report, "Births: Final Data for 2000." During
most of the 1970s and 1980s women gave birth to fewer than two children on
average, a rate insufficient to replace the population (2.1 is considered
the population's replacement level).
Increased fertility in 2000 was reported for all age groups except
teenagers.
Birth rates for teenagers fell to 48.5 births per 1,000 females 15-19 years
of age in 2000, a 22 percent decline from the record high of 62.1 in 1991.
"The continued decline in the teen birth rate is very encouraging," said
Secretary Thompson. "Reducing teen pregnancy is an important health goal for
our nation."
The birth rate for teens 15-17 was down 5 percent, while the rate for 18-19
year olds declined 1 percent for 2000. Overall teen birth rates declined
for white, black, Hispanic, and Asian and Pacific Islander teens and were
stable for American Indians.
The new report features a number of other significant findings:
· There were 4,058,814 births in the U.S. in 2000, a 3 percent
increase from 1999, and the third straight increase following nearly a
decade of decline from 1990 thru 1997.
· The average number of children born to women over a lifetime was
fairly consistent along racial lines. White, Asian/Pacific Islander and
American Indian women all had total fertility rates of 2.1, and black women
had a total fertility rate of 2.2.
· Among Hispanic women, the total fertility rate (3.1) was higher than
the national rate, with the highest rates for Mexican women (3.3) and Puerto
Rican women (2.6) and the lowest for Cuban women (1.9).
· The percent of women who smoked during pregnancy declined again in
2000 to 12.2 percent, and has dropped by more than one-third since 1989.
· The rate of triplet and other higher-order multiple births declined
for the second consecutive year, after increasing more than five-fold
between 1980 and 1998.
· The rate of cesarean deliveries rose for the fourth consecutive year
to nearly 23 percent. The cesarean rate declined steadily between 1989 and
1996 but has risen 11 percent since 1996, and is now the highest reported
since 1989. Between 1999 and 2000, the primary cesarean rate was up 4
percent and the rate of vaginal birth after a previous cesarean dropped 12
percent.
· For the first year in nearly a decade, the pre-term birth rate
declined, from 11.8 percent to 11.6 percent of all births. The pre-term
rate has risen fairly steadily over the past two decades. However, the low
birthweight rate (7.6 percent) did not improve in 2000.
· More than one-third (33.2 percent) of all births were to unmarried
women, up from 33 percent in 1999. Birth rates increased for unmarried
women in all age groups except teenagers, whose rates continued to decline.
The report is available on CDC's National Center for Health Statistics Web
site at: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs (see link on the right hand side). This article appears in the following topics:
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