*The following is excerpted from an online article posted on HealthDay.
There’s been a steep decline over the past two decades in births to American girls under the age of 15, a new report finds.
Overall, “the number of U.S. births to females aged 10 to 14 was a record low in 2016, dropping to 2,253 from 8,519 in 2000,” a team from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention wrote.
Said another way, that means that the birth rate in this age group fell from 0.9 per 1,000 females in 2000 to just 0.2 births per 1,000 by 2016.
And the pace at which these declines have occurred has accelerated over time, the CDC noted, with the greatest improvements seen since 2008.
Why these much-welcomed trends?
The CDC researchers said that “a number of factors have been cited,” including a trend among the very young to delay first sex; decreased frequency of sexual activity; and “for sexually active teenagers, the use of effective contraception.”
Dr. Jennifer Wu, an obstetrician/gynecologist who works with young girls and women, called the report “a huge victory from a public health standpoint.”
“Pregnancies at such a young age pose large risks to the young mother,” she noted. “Often the pelvis is still small and these pregnancies may end up requiring cesarean sections. This then has implications for future pregnancies.”
And of course there’s the impact that becoming pregnant so young can have on long-term outcomes for mom and baby.
According to study co-authors T.J. Mathews and Brady Hamilton, “Childbearing by very young mothers is a matter of public concern because of the elevated health risks for these mothers and their infants and the socioeconomic consequences.” Mathews and Hamilton work at the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS).
There was more good news from the report: The “race gap” in births to underage girls is also shrinking. In fact, the largest decline in births for girls aged 10 to 14 occurred among black girls, the findings showed.
Not every state benefited from these trends equally, however. Births to young girls tended to be highest in southern states, with Louisiana and Mississippi maintaining rates above 0.5 births per 1,000, the investigators reported. Delaware and the District of Columbia also had relatively high rates.
The findings were published April 25 as an NCHS Data Brief.
Source: HealthDay
https://consumer.healthday.com/pregnancy-information-29/teen-pregnancy-news-547/big-decline-in-births-to-girls-under-15-cdc-says-733250.html