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| Unwed women set record for births in 2003
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| (Por , The Washington Times,
2005-09-12)
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Births to unmarried women in the United States hit a
record 1.4 million in 2003, while births to teens fell
for the 12th consecutive year.
Births to unmarried women increased
to 34.6 percent of all U.S. births -- also a
new record, said researchers with the National Center for Health
Statistics (NCHS), which released its final report on 2003 birth
data yesterday.
The rise in out-of-wedlock births worries social conservatives,
who say the problem is linked to poverty, juvenile delinquency
and poor social and educational outcomes.
One reason for the
higher unwed birthrates is that unmarried women are relying too
much on contraceptives instead of abstinence, said Bridget Maher, family
analyst at the Family Research Council. "Behavioral change -- and
not pharmaceuticals -- will solve this problem."
The decrease in
teen births -- a total of 421,241 in 2003, the
lowest "since 1946, the first year of the baby boom,"
the NCHS said -- was hailed as "a huge American
success story," by Sarah S. Brown, director of the National
Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy.
"I'm struck by the sheer
magnitude of the progress," Mrs. Brown said. Not only is
the teen birthrate down 57 percent from 1991, to 41.6
births per 1,000 teens, but the birthrate for black teens
has fallen by 67 percent over those 12 years, she
said. "That is astounding progress worth national attention."
Such progress,
however, was offset by record high levels of unmarried motherhood.
The number of unwed births "really jumped" from 1,365,966 in
2002 to 1,415,995 million in 2003 -- the highest number
recorded since the federal government started keeping records in 1940,
said Stephanie Ventura, one of the authors of the NCHS
report.
In the past, the steady increase in unwed births
was largely attributed to the concurrent rise in the number
of unmarried women, she said. But the 4 percent increase
between 2002 and 2003 is too big to be explained
by demographics, she said. "It's a change in the pattern."
Many researchers link increases in unwed childbearing to the rise
in unwed cohabitation, later-in-life marriages by young adults and an
increase in childbearing by older, single "mothers by choice."
"One thing to notice is that the
rates for unmarried teenagers continued to decline, so all these
[unwed birth] increases are in women in their 20s and
older," Mrs. Ventura said.
Joyce Martin, another NCHS researcher, said
the report had some good news on health indicators --
more women are getting prenatal care and fewer are smoking
during pregnancy. However, premature-birth rates are up, as are the
number of babies born with low birth weights. Also, the
rate of Caesarean section births hit a record high in
2003. C-sections are necessary for many
mothers, but some medical professionals worry that the procedure is
used when not medically needed, she said.
The 2003 data
also show that most births continue to occur among women
age 25 or older, said NCHS researcher Brady Hamilton.
In
the past -- until the early 1980s -- "the principal
childbearing years were 20 to 24," he said. In 2003,
the birthrate to women ages 20 to 24 reached its
lowest point on record while birthrates climbed among women in
their late 20s, 30s and early 40s.
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