School of Population Health, Curtin University, Bentley, WA, Australia.
College of Medicine and Health Sciences, Woldia University, Woldia, Ethiopia.
Front Public Health. 2024 Sep 23;12:1363284. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1363284. eCollection 2024.
Fertility rates are key indicators of population health and demographic change, influencing economic development, healthcare planning, and social policies. Understanding subnational variation in fertility rate is important for effective geographical targeting and policy prioritization. This study aimed to identify geographic variation, trends, and determinants of fertility rates in Ethiopia over the past two decades.
We estimated total fertility rates (TFRs) and age-specific fertility rates (ASFRs) using five nationally representative cross-sectional Demographic and Health Surveys collected in Ethiopia between 2000 and 2019. ASFRs represent the number of live births per 1,000 women aged 15 to 49 during the 3 years before each survey, while TFRs indicate the average number of children a woman would have by the end of her reproductive years, calculated as the sum of ASFRs over five-year intervals. We developed model-based geostatistics by incorporating demographic and healthcare access data with spatial random fields to produce high-resolution fertility rate maps. These results were then aggregated to produce fertility rate estimates at local, sub-national, and national levels in Ethiopia.
The national TFR gradually declined from 4.8 live births in 2000 to 4.2 live births in 2019, but it is still above the replacement level of 2.1 children per woman. There were sub-national and local variations in TFR, ranging from 5.7 live births in Somalia and 5.3 Oromia regions to 2.7 live births in Addis Ababa and 3.6 live births Dire Dawa cities. Geographical areas with high TFR were mostly associated with a high proportion of Muslim women and low access to health facilities.
Despite a decline in fertility rates among women of reproductive age over the past two decades, marked spatial variation persists at sub-national and local levels in Ethiopia, with demographic factors determining the spatial distribution and rate of decline, highlighting the need for tailored programs and strategies in high-fertility areas to increase access to family planning.
生育率是人口健康和人口变化的关键指标,影响经济发展、医疗保健规划和社会政策。了解生育率的次国家差异对于有效的地理定位和政策优先排序很重要。本研究旨在确定过去二十年来埃塞俄比亚生育率的地理变化、趋势和决定因素。
我们使用 2000 年至 2019 年期间在埃塞俄比亚进行的五次全国代表性的人口与健康调查,估计了总生育率(TFR)和年龄特定生育率(ASFR)。ASFR 表示每个调查前三年每 1000 名 15 至 49 岁的妇女的活产数,而 TFR 表示一名妇女在生育期结束时预计生育的孩子数,计算方法是将五年间隔的 ASFR 相加。我们通过将人口和医疗保健数据纳入空间随机场来开发基于模型的地统计学,以生成高分辨率的生育率图。然后将这些结果汇总,以在埃塞俄比亚的地方、次国家和国家各级生成生育率估计值。
全国 TFR 从 2000 年的 4.8 个活产逐渐下降到 2019 年的 4.2 个活产,但仍高于每名妇女 2.1 个孩子的更替水平。TFR 存在次国家和地方差异,从索马里和奥罗米亚地区的 5.7 个活产到亚的斯亚贝巴和 Dire Dawa 城市的 2.7 个和 3.6 个活产不等。高生育率地区主要与穆斯林妇女比例高和获得医疗设施机会低有关。
尽管过去二十年来育龄妇女的生育率有所下降,但埃塞俄比亚在次国家和地方一级仍存在显著的空间差异,人口因素决定了空间分布和下降速度,这突出表明需要在高生育率地区制定有针对性的方案和战略,以增加计划生育的机会。