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New
Jersey Health Statistics
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BIRTHSStatistical
Overview There were 115,769 live births to The median age of women
who gave birth in 2001 was 30.3 (Table N28); 47.9 percent of mothers were under age
30 and 52.1 percent were 30 and over (Table N18
and Figure N8). The
number and percent of births to teens continued a long decline (to
7,795 births or 6.7% of the total number of births) that has lasted
more than three decades. Conversely,
the number and percent of births to women 35 and over continued to
rise, increasing to 24,100 births (20.8% of all births) (Table N19
and Figure N9). White
non-Hispanic women accounted for 55.2 percent of births; 20.0 percent
were to Hispanic women of any race; 15.9 percent were to black non-Hispanic
women; and 8.1 percent were to Asian and Pacific Islander non-Hispanic
women (Table N22 and Figure N7). For 28.7 percent of women giving birth in 2001,
this was their first pregnancy (Table N25);
for 41.0 percent this was their first live birth and for 33.2 percent
this was their second (Table N27 and Figure N12).
The median age of women giving birth to their first child was
27.7 (Table N28). The
proportion of births occurring to unmarried mothers increased slightly
to 28.8 percent (Table N29
and Figure N13).
For women under 25 years of age, Hispanics, and non-Hispanic
blacks, more than half of births in 2001 occurred to unmarried women
(Table N30). Nearly three-quarters
of women received prenatal care in the first trimester of pregnancy,
while 1.6 percent did not receive care at all (Table N35
and Figure N14).
Older mothers, white or Asian/Pacific Islander non-Hispanic
mothers, married mothers, mothers with higher levels of education,
and U.S.-born mothers were more likely to receive early prenatal care
while younger mothers, black non-Hispanic mothers, unmarried mothers,
and less educated mothers were more likely to not receive any care
(Tables N37-N39,
N41).
On average, mothers who gave birth in 2001 received 10.9 prenatal
care visits. In 2001, 7.7 percent of
infants were of low birth weight (less than 2,500 grams at birth). While the low birth weight percentages among
infants of white non-Hispanic and Hispanic mothers were below the
overall percentage (6.4% and 7.0%, respectively), 13.0 percent of
black non-Hispanic mothers' infants weighed less than 2,500 grams
at birth (Table N49 and Figure N19). Low birth weights occurred most frequently among
the youngest and the oldest mothers, while mothers aged 25-34 had
the lowest rates (Table N49 and Figure N18).
Low birth weight was highly correlated with plurality. While only 5.8 percent of singletons were of
low birth weight, 53.7 percent of multiple births weighed less than
2,500 grams (Table N53 and Figure N21). The likelihood of low birth weight also increased
with the number of previous pregnancy terminations and with a lack
of prenatal care (Tables N52 & N54 and Figures N20 & N22).
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Copyright
© State of New Jersey, 1996-2003 |
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