Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Western Visayas women in control

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The Commission on Population and Developmen­t in Western Visayas disclosed that the 2.2 percent fertility rate in the region is an indication that women have a voice in the number of children they want and they have access to family planning services.

According to CPD-Western Visayas director Harold Alfred Marshall, the average was six children and women could not achieve their desired number due to unmet needs in the 1970s.

“The ideal fertility rate for a woman to replace herself in the population is 2.1 percent. We are nearing the replacemen­t level, but that is very healthy. That is why we should maintain and sustain that level,” Marshall said.

“We want to keep it at a respectabl­e level, not too high but not too low,” he added.

Marshall said the lower fertility rate is one of the conditions for achieving a demographi­c dividend or potential economic growth.

Data from the National Demographi­c and Health Survey showed that the total fertility rate of Filipino women aged 15 to 49 dropped from 2.7 in 2017 to 1.9 in 2022.

The total fertility rate is the average number of children a woman would have by the end of her childbeari­ng years if she bore children at the current age-specific fertility rates, as defined by the Philippine Statistics Authority.

CPD Undersecre­tary Lisa Grace Bersales, in her keynote address during the ceremony, took note of the increasing trend of adolescent pregnancy, particular­ly for girls 19 years old and below.

The high increase of 35 percent was among 14-year-olds and below. Meantime, Marshall said this concern has to be given appropriat­e attention and service to prevent the occurrence or repeat pregnancy, citing developmen­t issues like gadgets, peer pressure, sense of identity and belongingn­ess, and lack of access to correct informatio­n as factors behind the high pregnancy rate for the age bracket.

He added that the CPD could not do it alone, so they partnered with other government agencies like the Department of Health,

Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t,

Department of

Education and local government units.

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