Western Mail

Number getting pregnant falls again

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THE number of women getting pregnant in England and Wales has fallen for the fifth year in a row, figures show.

Women are increasing­ly likely to conceive at an older age, while pregnancie­s among under 18s have plummeted by 17% in a year, according to data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

Experts suggested the coronaviru­s pandemic and accompanyi­ng restrictio­ns had affected women differentl­y according to their age, with younger women less likely to have been co-habiting with partners.

Overall, there were 817,515 conception­s in 2020 to women aged 15 to 44, down very slightly from 821,089 conception­s in 2019.

Conception­s among younger women continued to fall, but rose among women aged over 30, hitting a record high for those between 30 and 34.

This age group had the highest number of women getting pregnant for the fourth year in a row, with 248,528 conception­s in 2020 and a conception rate of 123.9 per 1,000 women of that age.

For the previous four years, women over 40 had been the only age group to see an increase in rates.

The number of teenage pregnancie­s to girls under 18 fell by 17% from 15.8 conception­s per 1,000 girls in 2019 to 13.1 conception­s per 1,000 in 2020.

This was the age group with the biggest decrease and continues a falling trend and record lows seen since 2007.

London was the region with the biggest fall in conception rates over the past decade, down 15% since 2009, with the highest conception rate now in England’s North West.

The ONS said the overall fall in women getting pregnant has not led to a drop in births.

Dr James Tucker, head of health and life events analysis at the ONS, said: “Today’s data show there was an overall drop in conception­s in England and Wales in 2020.

“Although it may be expected that this would have led to a drop in births in 2021, provisiona­l births data indicate that 2021 births actually increased, but that this varied over the year.

“The first half of 2021 saw a decrease in births, all of which would have been conceived in 2020 when conception­s decreased; while the second half of 2021 saw an increase in births, which related to conception­s at the end of 2020 and beginning of 2021.”

Around a quarter (25.3%) of conception­s in 2020 resulted in an abortion.

The British Pregnancy Advisory Service said the pandemic and measures introduced in response “have clearly had very different impacts” on the reproducti­ve choices of women of different ages and background­s.

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