Sentences with phrase «increased birth rate»

This is because additional pupils resulting from an increased birth rate in the early 2000s are now entering the secondary phase.
The basic cause is not an increased birth rate but the radically decreased death rate, resulting largely from antibiotics and disinfectants developed during World War II.
The surge in pupil numbers is due to many different factors, including the impact of the baby boom, increasing birth rate levels and immigration.
Many people who encounter feral cats start feeding them, but feeding alone can actually make the situation worse by increasing the birth rate of kittens.

Not exact matches

As soon as doctors started using vitrification, the success rate for pregnancies and births from donated eggs increased dramatically.
In the US, birth rates have been increasing for women over 30, according to the same CDC report, and this may also have something to do with the rising multiple birth rate.
The rate of twin births in the United States has increased nearly 80 % since 1980, according to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The multiple birth rate's precipitous increase since 1980 looks pretty strange at first, but there's clear science behind it.
But the further facts are, first, that that increase is attributable to a temporary unbalance between Jewish birth rate and Jewish death rate in Eastern Europe in the nineteenth century, second, that that unbalance has largely corrected itself, and, third, that the gates of immigration into the United States are now closed.
The rate of triplets and higher order multiple births (like quintuplets), while rarer overall, has also increased dramatically since 1980 — it's more than quadrupled.
Most of that increase occurred between 1980 and 2009, when the rate of twin births rose 76 %.
«This company is about as direct investment you can make on the birth rate increasing,» Dodson said.
Over the 20th century, average household size declined reflecting increased incomes and demographic factors, notably a lower birth rate and an increase in the share of single adult households with or without children (Graph 2).
Christian population is in increase in many of Asian and African countries by both birth rate and conversion.
Some of these youngsters will get pregnant when they would not have done otherwise and the overall teenage pregnancy (births and abortions combined) rate is likely to increase.
Does it regularly happen that increasing prosperity leads to lower birth rates?
Birth rates increase and decrease in a most unpredictable fashion over the course of history.
Yet in barely fifteen years, starting in 1965, the birth rate and the marriage rate in all the industrialized countries tumbled, while divorces and births outside marriage increased rapidly.
Because of the slowing birth rate in developed countries which have a higher than average amount people who profess no religion (minus the united states), the developing countries, such as Brazil who are highly religious, account for an increase in religious profession.
By the way the studies have come in from other countries with the stats showing a increase in out of wedlock birth rates.
The cultural changes that Fuchs and Reklis have in mind are increasing individualism, growing preoccupation with individual fulfillment, wider tolerance for divorce as a solution to marital problems, and more general acceptance at all social levels of the high rates of out - of - wedlock births and single parenthood.
In poor countries the birth rate is soaring, while consumption has leveled off (which means per capita consumption is going down); in rich countries the birth rate has leveled off, while consumption is increasing.
Mr Chen said impacts from a fall in the birth rate may be offset by increased pricing activity by the formula makers, while a further fall in breast - feeding rates also may provide a boost.
Influenced by lowering birth rates and increasing life expectancy, all major European countries such as the UK, France, Germany, Spain and Italy have more than 16 % of population who are aged above 65 years in 2012.
• In Niger recruiting husbands to understand the importance of their wives» receiving ante-natal care and giving birth in clinics resulted in increased rates of prenatal care and assisted and safe deliveries; reduced infant mortality; the construction new community facilities for women and midwives; and changes in the men's attitudes and behavior (UNFPA, 2011).
If we advocate for more midwives and other conditions that will increase the natural birth rate, does that equate to shaming every mother who had a c - section?
Whilst we do not have rigorous evaluation evidence of the effectiveness of Ecole des Maris, testimony from the men involved, and from pregnant women and new mothers, indicates that the scheme has transformed attitudes towards healthcare, as well as substantially increasing the rates of attended labour in a country where maternal and child death rates at birth remain high.
In 2001, the USDA concluded that if breastfeeding rates were increased to 75 percent at birth and 50 percent at six months, it would lead to a national government savings of a minimum of $ 3.6 billion (and this only considered a few of the health benefits of breastfeeding, not all of them).
Birth interventions related to lower rates of exclusive breastfeeding and increased risk of postpartum depression in a large sample.
Research shows lower C - section rates among women who receive doula support as well as increased satisfaction with their birth experience.
This means that when certified midwives (CMs) or certified nurse - midwives (CNMs) attended births, the outcomes were the same except that no increase in neonatal death rates were seen, or stated in another way, only was the neonatal death rate increased when studies in which uncertified midwives were included.
Yes, it rings true that birth rate increases herald better economic times, and any hopeful news is badly wanted these days.
This means that in the studies in which midwives with certification of some kind attended home births, the outcomes were the same except there was no increase in the neonatal death rate.
Low birth weight rate has increased 9 % since 2000 and 24 % since the mid 1980s.
That's why it is absolutely critical for readers of Charlotte's story to understand that Charlotte didn't have to die, that homebirth increases the risk of perinatal death, and that licensed Oregon homebirth midwives have a death rate 800 % higher than term hospital birth.
Test Leads to Needless C - Sections A 2006 analysis found that fetal heart monitoring failed to reduce the risk of a baby's dying late in pregnancy, during birth, or shortly after birth — and increased cesarean section rates and forceps deliveries, compared with listening to a baby's heart rate intermittently.
Looking behind the Curtain A recent study of elective induction at term purports to show that it would reduce perinatal mortality without affecting spontaneous birth rates, although it would increase admission to a special neonatal care unit if done before 41 weeks, which contradicts the current belief that elective delivery at 39 weeks poses no excess risk.
They may develop postpartum depression or post-traumatic stress syndrome.9, 20,25,31 Some mothers express dominant feelings of fear and anxiety about their cesarean as long as five years later.16 Women having cesarean sections are less likely to decide to become pregnant again.16 As is true of all abdominal surgery, internal scar tissue can cause pelvic pain, pain during sexual intercourse, and bowel problems.Reproductive consequences compared with vaginal birth include increased infertility, 16 miscarriage, 15 placenta previa (placenta overlays the cervix), 19 placental abruption (the placenta detaches partially or completely before the birth), 19 and premature birth.8 Even in women planning repeat cesarean, uterine rupture occurs at a rate of 1 in 500 versus 1 in 10,000 in women with no uterine scar.27
These include, natural birth (the cesarean rates around the world are high and on the increase), eating a diet more suited to one's own country (not fast foods), and knowing how to breastfeed from having seen other women doing so.
However, 82.7 % of U.S. births occur under the supervision of obstetricians within the hospital, and our elevated cesarean rate and increased mortality rates are the result.
The Scandinavian countries and the Netherlands, which did not follow the trend towards steep increases in caesarean sections during the 1990s, 9 have a tradition of perceiving birth above all as a normal physiological process and of valuing low intervention rates.
Safety is of utmost concern at Manzanita Midwifery, and water birth does not increase maternal or newborn infection rates or perineal tearing compared to birthing outside of water.
These are my insiders secrets to increase your likelihood of avoiding high rates of risky medical and surgical interventions, serious complications including birth trauma for you and your baby, and having the birth of your dreams.
When the analysis was restricted to units or trusts with a response rate of at least 85 %, the higher odds of the primary outcome for nulliparous women in the planned home birth group remained, and the strength of this association increased (appendix 5 on bmj.com).
The strengths of the study include the ability to compare outcomes by the woman's planned place of birth at the start of care in labour, the high participation of midwifery units and trusts in England, the large sample size and statistical power to detect clinically important differences in adverse perinatal outcomes, the minimisation of selection bias through achievement of a high response rate and absence of self selection bias due to non-consent, the ability to compare groups that were similar in terms of identified clinical risk (according to current clinical guidelines) and to further increase the comparability of the groups by conducting an additional analysis restricted to women with no complicating conditions identified at the start of care in labour, and the ability to control for several important potential confounders.
Reproductive technologies have dramatically increased the rate of multiple births in the United States.
I also became aware of statistics about the increasing rate of C - sections in the United States — in just the last ten years they've increased by 50 percent nationwide and now occur in nearly one out of three births.
Induction of Labour: * higher rates of Caesarean Section * increased risk of your baby being admitted to NICU (neonatal intensive care unit) * increased risk of forceps or vacuum (assisted delivery) * contractions may be stronger than a spontaneous labour * your labour is no longer considered «low risk» — less choices in where and how you birth, restricted birth positions, continuous monitoring CTG, time limits for which to labour in.
Someone, probably, will say seriously, that it's ONLY the homebirth midwives who are respecting a woman's right to a vaginal breech, twin, or post dates birth at home, and HER right to the lower rate of intervention at home trumps the mythical rights of the baby, and that since it's the sisters in chains that are taking back a woman's right to physiologic birth where SHE wants it that IF there is an increased risk to the baby it's the mother's right to take that risk.
Serge Bielanko wrote Don't Be Afraid, It's Just a Home Birth, and he apparently thinks its simply hilarious that people are warning him about the increased rate of death at homebirth.
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