Kapiti Observer

Big fall in number of teen pregnancie­s

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New Zealand’s teen birth rate has halved in the last nine years, but remains high compared to other countries.

In 2016 the rate for 15 - 19-yearolds was 16 births per 1000 women, half the 2008 rate of 33, new data from Statistics New Zealand shows.

Teen pregnancie­s have been in steady decline across the industrial­ised world. Research suggests that greater access to contracept­ion and a decrease in teen sexual activity is responsibl­e.

There were 2865 live births to teenagers in 2016, and 5223 in 2008. Mothers under the age of 15 represent a tiny proportion of those - just 15 in 2016.

Australia’s rate for 2015 was 12 teen births per 1000 women. New Zealand’s rate has consistent­ly been the second highest of the OECD countries, after the US.

The socially disadvanta­ged are still more likely to give birth as teenagers. A 2015 University of Waikato study showed that teen births were dropping in every region of New Zealand other than Northland, with the rate particular­ly low in urban areas.

‘‘The predominan­tly metropolit­an regions of Auckland, Wellington and Canterbury, as well as the rest of the South Island, all had rates well below the national average, with the lowest teenage fertility rate seen in Canterbury,’’ the researcher­s wrote.

The Maori teen birth rate, which has long been higher than the total population, has also declined in recent years. In 2013 it was 53.1 births per 1000 women. The teen birth rate reached its highest recorded level in 1972 with 69 births per 1000 women.

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