Births: Final Data for 2003
Joyce A. Martin, Brady E. Hamilton, Paul D. Sutton, Stephanie J. Ventura, Fay Menacker and Martha L. Munson

The teenage birth rate fell 3 percent in 2003 to 41.6 births per 1,000 women aged 15-19 years, another record low for the Nation. The rate has plummeted by one-third since the 1991 peak (61.8). The rate for females aged 10-14 years declined to 0.6 per 1,000, a one-third decline since 2000. Birth rates for teenagers 15-17 and 18-19 years each fell 3 percent. The rate for ages 15-17 years was 22.4 per 1,000, 42 percent lower than in 1991, and the rate for ages 18-19 years was 70.7 per 1,000, 25 percent lower than in 1991. Declines in rates have been especially striking for black teenagers: their overall rate dropped 45 percent since 1991, whereas the rate for young black females 15-17 years has plunged more than half. Rate declines for all teenagers were substantial enough to more than compensate for the increased number of female teenagers, so that the number of births to women under 20 years dropped to the fewest since 1946, the first year of the baby boom.


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