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Published byMervin Collins Modified over 6 years ago
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Total U.S. Births, U.S. births dropped substantially between 2007 and 2011 and have remained relatively stable since then at around 3.95 million. The decline corresponded initially to the recession. What’s most notable at this point is that as the economy has recovered the number of births haven’t risen back to earlier totals. This is largely the result of the major drop in the birth rate among Hispanics as seen in the following slide. Source: Adapted from CDC VitalSTATS.
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U.S. General Fertility Rates (per 1,000) by Race/Ethnicity, 1989-2014
There are three somewhat different trends going on among the three major race/ethnicity groups in the U.S. after While the birth rate among non-Hispanic blacks declined somewhat, there was a steep decline among Hispanics. In 2007 the Hispanic birth rate was 70% higher than the non-Hispanic white rate. By 2014 it was only 15% higher. To put it another way – the non-Hispanic white rate has remained essentially unchanged since 2007, while the non-Hispanic black (9.9%) and Hispanic (29.5%) rates have declined substantially. The result is that the long term trend toward non-Hispanic white births becoming less than 50% of all births (the majority-minority) has abated.as we see in the next slide. Fertility rates computed by relating total births, regardless of age of mother, to women years. Source: NCHS. Annual Birth Reports
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Fears of a “Majority/Minority” of births are unfounded…for now Proportion of all U.S. Births, Non-Hispanic white births accounted for about two out of every three (66%) births in This was followed by a steady decline in the proportion of all births to whites. By 2000 they accounted for 59% of all U.S. births and by %. The decline was driven primarily by a rapid growth in births to Hispanic mothers which, by 2007 had reached almost a quarter (24.6%) of all births. However the recent decline in the Hispanic birth rate has led to a slight decline in that proportion. The proportion of all births to non-Hispanic blacks has remained relatively steady across the last quarter century. Source: Adapted from CDC VitalSTATS.
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US Cesarean Rates, 1989-2015 % 32.0% www.BirthByTheNumbers.org
There were 3,977,745 births in the US in If the 1996 rate of 20.7% had been maintained, there would have been 823,393 cesareans or about 450,000 fewer than the 1,272,878 cesareans that were recorded in the US in That’s what would happen if we’d just stayed at 1996 levels. In 2010 for the first time in 13 years, the US cesarean rate decreased slightly (from 32.9% to 32.8%)and by 2015 it would drop to an even 32%. Between 2014 and 2015, 33 states experienced a decline, led by Montana (1.7 percentage point decline), District of Columbia (1.0 percentage points) and Michigan, New Jersey and Louisiana (0.8 percentage points each). 16 states saw and increase, led by Hawaii (1.3 percentage point increase). Source: National Center for Health Statistics Annual Birth Reports
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Total cesarean rates by race/ethnicity, U.S. 1989-2015
1989 WNH +1.4percentage points 2015 BNH +4.4 percentage points This slide breaks down cesarean rates by race/ethnicity into the three major groups reported on by NCHS (data on births to Asian Mothers is not readily available nationally though it is in many states). It undermines the myth that the rising cesarean rate was driven by white mothers, perhaps demanding scheduled cesareans. Actually there’s a more interesting pattern with the decline in cesarean rates in the early 1990s happening only among white non-Hispanic and Hispanic mothers. Rates for black non-Hispanic mothers were essentially unchanged from When rates began to rise in the mid 1990s, they rose slightly faster among black mothers than the other groups. The result is that over the 20 year period documented, the US went from white non-Hispanic mothers having a cesarean rate 1.4 percentage points higher than black non-Hispanic mothers to the latter group having a rate 2.6 percentage points higher by 2009 when the overall rate peaked. Since 2009, the cesarean rate has remained essentially unchanged among non-Hispanic black mothers (approximately 35.5%) and Hispanic mothers (31.7%). NOTABLY THE OVERALL DECLINE IN U.S. CESAREAN RATES BETWEEN WAS DRIVEN BY THE DECREASE AMONG NON-HISPANIC WHITE MOTHERS (32.8% TO 31.1%). The result is that the disparity in the cesarean rate between white and black mothers is now 4.4 percentage points, the largest ever recorded. Source: National Center for Health Statistics Annual Birth Reports
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