Portsmouth News

Decrease in number of pregnant city women

Lockdown restrictio­ns and fears over employment may be factors

- By FIONA CALLINGHAM Health reporter fiona.callingham@thenews.co.uk

FEWER Portsmouth women fell pregnant in 2020 compared to the year before, new figures show, as nationally conception­s fell for the fifth year in a row.

Office for National Statistics figures show there were 3,129 conception­s to women

aged between 15 and 44 in the city in 2020 – down from 3,263 in 2019.

They were among 817,515 conception­s nationally, marginally down from 821,089 the year prior and marking the fifth consecutiv­e annual fall.

Women aged between 30 and 34 had the most conception­s – in the south east the conception rate among women in this age bracket was 139.4 per 1,000 people in 2020.

The British Pregnancy Advisory Service (BPAS) 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.

This includes a steep 17 per cent drop in young pregnancie­s among girls aged under 18, with the conception rate plummeting from 15.8 per 1,000 girls in 2019 to 13.1 per 1,000 people in 2020.

The teenage conception rate is now at its lowest point since records began, having fallen every year since 2007.

In total, there were 12,576 conception­s to under-18s across England and Wales in 2020.

Of them, 72 were in Portsmouth – up from 65 in 2019.

Katherine O’Brien, spokeswoma­n for BPAS, said: ‘Lockdown restrictio­ns which prevented socialisin­g with anyone other than members of your own household will have had a greater impact on women in younger age groups, who will be less likely to have been co-habiting with partners.

‘This may be reflected in the sharp decrease in conception rates among those aged under 20, with conception­s rates among under-18s now standing at a record low.’

She said women on low incomes will be feeling anxious about their employment prospects and finances amid the cost-of-living crisis, adding that ‘these challenges are playing a very significan­t role in pregnancy decision making.’

But a fall in conception­s nationally has not led to a drop in births, Dr James Tucker, head of health and life events analysis at the ONS, revealed.

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