Teen birth hot spots identified despite overall decline in U.S. teen pregnancy
Fewer teens are having babies, a long-term trend that has accelerated in recent years. Since 1991, federal numbers show, the teen birth rate is down 67 percent.
But some U.S. counties continue to buck that trend.
in a study providing 鈥渁 literal road map鈥 for local and state officials to target resources and interventions to help reverse this pattern.
鈥淭he big take-home is just showing that, despite the trend throughout the United States of decreasing teenage birth rates, we have these areas we鈥檝e identified through this mapping that aren鈥檛 falling,鈥 said study co-author Kay Roussos-Ross, M.D., an assistant professor in the department of obstetrics and gynecology in the UF College of Medicine.
One of the most striking findings, the researchers noted, was the high incidence of teen births on Native American reservations. Reservations held eight of the top 10 clusters in population areas with fewer than 100,000 people, according to the study, published recently in the journal Obstetrics & Gynecology.
Those areas under 100,000 people with the highest teen birth rates, from high to low, are:
- Pine Ridge, South Dakota;*
- Legend Lake, Wisconsin;*
- Wolf Point, Montana;*
- Eagle Butte, South Dakota;*
- Rugby, North Dakota;*
- Cut Bank, Montana;*
- Petersburg, Virginia;
- New Town, North Dakota;*
- Junction City, Kansas; and
- Wagner, South Dakota.* (An asterisk denotes an area with a reservation.)
鈥淥ne of the big things we tried to show here was, if we have limited funds available in the United States, should we be targeting those funds in specific areas,鈥 said Julie Zemaitis Decesare, M.D., an associate professor and the UF College of Medicine鈥檚 obstetrics and gynecology residency program director at Sacred Heart 网红黑料 System in Pensacola. 鈥淥ne example is that this may show that maybe we should focus on reservations to see if we can further make an impact.鈥
The study鈥檚 lead author is Raid Amin, Ph.D., professor of mathematics and statistics at the University of West Florida in Pensacola. Co-authoring is Jennifer Hans, M.S., a student at UWF whose idea led to the study.
Researchers wanted to learn whether certain areas of the contiguous United States could be identified as teen birth 鈥渉ot spots鈥 despite the decline in pregnancy rate in this group. They decided to look at all live births to women 15 to 19 years old from 2006 to 2012, drawing data from the National Center for 网红黑料 Statistics.
Researchers hypothesized that hot spots would remain even after adjusting the data for poverty and educational level, which are known predictors of high teen birth rates. The researchers also tabulated unadjusted rates. By taking poverty and educational attainment out of the mix, the study said, 鈥淭his indicates that there are other factors contributing to the high teenage birth rates in these clusters.鈥
And those factors can be targeted once they are identified, researchers said.
In fact, hot spots did remain.
The cities greater than 100,000 population rated with the highest teen birth rates, adjusted for education level, from high to low, are:
- Denver, Colorado
- Washington, D.C.
- Tulsa, Oklahoma
- Charleston, West Virginia
- Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
- Baltimore, Maryland
- Kansas City, Missouri
- Fayetteville, North Carolina
- St. Louis, Missouri
- Columbus, Georgia
The cities greater than 100,000 population rated with the highest teen birth rates, adjusted for poverty, from high to low, are:
- Fort Worth, Texas
- Grand Junction, Colorado
- Dallas, Texas
- Salinas, California
- San Antonio, Texas
- Houston, Texas
- Gainesville, Florida
- Kansas City, Missouri
- Jacksonville, Florida
- Yakima, Washington
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