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Fertility

Fertility is the capability to produce offspring through reproduction following the onset of sexual maturity. The fertility rate is the average number of children born by a female during her lifetime and is quantified demographically. Fertility is addressed when there is a difficulty or an inability to reproduce naturally, which is referred to as infertility. Infertility is widespread, with fertility specialists available all over the world to assist mothers and couples who experience difficulties having a baby.

Human fertility depends on factors of nutrition, sexual behaviour, consanguinity, culture, instinct, endocrinology, timing, economics, personality,[1] way of life, and emotions.

Fertility differs from fecundity, which is defined as the potential for reproduction (influenced by gamete production, fertilization and carrying a pregnancy to term).[2] Where a woman or the lack of fertility is infertility while a lack of fecundity would be called sterility.

Demography

In demographic contexts, fertility refers to the actual production of offspring, rather than the physical capability to produce which is termed fecundity.[3][4] While fertility can be measured, fecundity cannot be. Demographers measure the fertility rate in a variety of ways, which can be broadly broken into "period" measures and "cohort" measures. "Period" measures refer to a cross-section of the population in one year. "Cohort" data on the other hand, follows the same people over a period of decades. Both period and cohort measures are widely used.[5]

Period measures

  • Crude birth rate (CBR) - the number of live births in a given year per 1,000 people alive at the middle of that year. One disadvantage of this indicator is that it is influenced by the age structure of the population.
  • General fertility rate (GFR) - the number of births in a year divided by the number of women aged 15–44, times 1000. It focuses on the potential mothers only, and takes the age distribution into account.
  • Child-Woman Ratio (CWR) - the ratio of the number of children under 5 to the number of women 15–49, times 1000. It is especially useful in historical data as it does not require counting births. This measure is actually a hybrid, because it involves deaths as well as births. (That is, because of infant mortality some of the births are not included; and because of adult mortality, some of the women who gave birth are not counted either.)
  • Coale's Index of Fertility - a special device used in historical research

Cohort measures

 
Countries by fertility rate as of 2020
  • Total fertility rate (TFR) - the total number of children a woman would bear during her lifetime if she were to experience the prevailing age-specific fertility rates of women. TFR equals the sum for all age groups of 5 times each ASFR rate.[6]
  • Gross Reproduction Rate (GRR) - the number of girl babies a synthetic cohort will have. It assumes that all of the baby girls will grow up and live to at least age 50.
  • Net Reproduction Rate (NRR) - the NRR starts with the GRR and adds the realistic assumption that some of the women will die before age 49; therefore they will not be alive to bear some of the potential babies that were counted in the GRR. NRR is always lower than GRR, but in countries where mortality is very low, almost all the baby girls grow up to be potential mothers, and the NRR is practically the same as GRR. In countries with high mortality, NRR can be as low as 70% of GRR. When NRR = 1.0, each generation of 1000 baby girls grows up and gives birth to exactly 1000 girls. When NRR is less than one, each generation is smaller than the previous one. When NRR is greater than 1 each generation is larger than the one before. NRR is a measure of the long-term future potential for growth, but it usually is different from the current population growth rate.

Social and economic determinants of fertility

A parent's number of children strongly correlates with the number of children that each person in the next generation will eventually have.[7] Factors generally associated with increased fertility include religiosity,[8] intention to have children,[9] and maternal support.[10] Factors generally associated with decreased fertility include wealth, education,[11][12] female labor participation,[13] urban residence,[14] cost of housing,[15][16] intelligence, increased female age and (to a lesser degree) increased male age.

The "Three-step Analysis" of the fertility process was introduced by Kingsley Davis and Judith Blake in 1956 and makes use of three proximate determinants:[17][18] The economic analysis of fertility is part of household economics, a field that has grown out of the New Home Economics. Influential economic analyses of fertility include Becker (1960),[19] Mincer (1963),[20] and Easterlin (1969).[21] The latter developed the Easterlin hypothesis to account for the Baby Boom.

Bongaarts' model of components of fertility

Bongaarts proposed a model where the total fertility rate of a population can be calculated from four proximate determinants and the total fecundity (TF). The index of marriage (Cm), the index of contraception (Cc), the index of induced abortion (Ca) and the index of postpartum infecundability (Ci). These indices range from 0 to 1. The higher the index, the higher it will make the TFR, for example a population where there are no induced abortions would have a Ca of 1, but a country where everybody used infallible contraception would have a Cc of 0.

TFR = TF × Cm × Ci × Ca × Cc

These four indices can also be used to calculate the total marital fertility (TMFR) and the total natural fertility (TN).

TFR = TMFR × Cm

TMFR = TN × Cc × Ca

TN = TF × Ci

Intercourse
The first step is sexual intercourse, and an examination of the average age at first intercourse, the average frequency outside marriage, and the average frequency inside.
Conception
Certain physical conditions may make it impossible for a woman to conceive. This is called "involuntary infecundity." If the woman has a condition making it possible, but unlikely to conceive, this is termed "subfecundity." Venereal diseases (especially gonorrhea, syphilis, and chlamydia) are common causes. Nutrition is a factor as well: women with less than 20% body fat may be subfecund, a factor of concern for athletes and people susceptible to anorexia. Demographer Ruth Frisch has argued that "It takes 50,000 calories to make a baby". There is also subfecundity in the weeks following childbirth, and this can be prolonged for a year or more through breastfeeding. A furious political debate raged in the 1980s over the ethics of baby food companies marketing infant formula in developing countries. A large industry has developed to deal with subfecundity in women and men. An equally large industry has emerged to provide contraceptive devices designed to prevent conception. Their effectiveness in use varies. On average, 85% of married couples using no contraception will have a pregnancy in one year. The rate drops to the 20% range when using withdrawal, vaginal sponges, or spermicides. (This assumes the partners never forget to use the contraceptive.) The rate drops to only 2 or 3% when using the pill or an IUD, and drops to near 0% for implants and 0% for tubal ligation (sterilization) of the woman, or a vasectomy for the man.
Gestation
After a fetus is conceived, it may or may not survive to birth. "Involuntary fetal mortality" involves natural abortion, miscarriages and stillbirth (a fetus born dead). Human intervention intentionally causing abortion of the fetus is called "therapeutic abortion".

Fertility biology

Women have hormonal cycles which determine when they can achieve pregnancy. The cycle is approximately twenty-eight days long, with a fertile period of five days per cycle, but can deviate greatly from this norm. Men are fertile continuously, but their sperm quality is affected by their health, frequency of ejaculation, and environmental factors.[22]

Fertility declines with age in both sexes. For women, the decline begins around the age of 32, and becomes precipitous at age 37. For men, potency and sperm quality begins to decline around the age of 40. Even if an older couple does manage to conceive a child, the pregnancy will be increasingly difficult for the mother, and carries a higher risk of birth defects and genetic disorders for the child.[23]

Pregnancy rates for sexual intercourse are highest when it occurs every 1 or 2 days,[24] or every 2 or 3 days.[25] Studies have found no significant difference between different sex positions and pregnancy rate, as long as it results in ejaculation into the vagina.[26]

Menstrual cycle

 
Chance of fertilization by menstrual cycle day relative to ovulation.[27]

A woman's menstrual cycle begins, as arbitrarily assigned, with menses. Next is the follicular phase where estrogen levels build as an ovum matures (due to the follicular stimulating hormone, or FSH) within the ovary. When estrogen levels peak, it spurs a surge of luteinizing hormone (LH) which completes maturation and enables the ovum to break through the ovary wall.[28] This is ovulation. During the luteal phase following ovulation LH and FSH cause the post-ovulation ovary to develop into the corpus luteum which produces progesterone. The production of progesterone inhibits the LH and FSH hormones which (in a cycle without pregnancy) causes the corpus luteum to atrophy, and menses to begin the cycle again.

Peak fertility occurs during just a few days of the cycle: usually two days before and two days after the ovulation date.[29] This fertile window varies from woman to woman, just as the ovulation date often varies from cycle to cycle for the same woman.[30] The ovule is usually capable of being fertilized for up to 48 hours after it is released from the ovary. Sperm survive inside the uterus between 48 and 72 hours on average, with the maximum being 120 hours (5 days).

These periods and intervals are important factors for couples using the rhythm method of contraception.

Female fertility

The average age of menarche in the United States is about 12.5 years.[31] In postmenarchal girls, about 80% of the cycles are anovulatory (ovulation does not actually take place) in the first year after menarche, 50% in the third and 10% in the sixth year.[32]

Menopause occurs during a woman's midlife between ages 48 and 55.[33][34] During menopause, hormonal production by the ovaries is reduced, eventually causing a permanent cessation of the creation of the uterine lining (period). This is considered the end of the fertile phase of a woman's life.

The predicted effect of age on female fertility in women trying to get pregnant, without using fertility drugs or in vitro fertilization:[35]

  • At age 30
    • 75% will conceive ending in a live birth within one year
    • 91% will conceive ending in a live birth within four years.
  • At age 35
    • 66% will conceive ending in a live birth within one year
    • 84% will conceive ending in a live birth within four years.
  • At age 40
    • 44% will conceive ending in a live birth within one year
    • 64% will conceive ending in a live birth within four years.

[35]

Studies of couples trying to conceive have yielded better results: one 2004 study of 770 European women found that 82% of 35- to 39-year-old women conceived within a year,[36] while a study in 2013 of 2,820 Danish women saw 78% of 35- to 40-year-olds conceive within a year.[37]

According to an opinion by the Practice Committee of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, specific coital timing or position, and resting supine after intercourse have no significant impact on fertility. Sperm can be found in the cervical canal seconds after ejaculation, regardless of coital position.[38]

The use of fertility drugs and/or invitro fertilization can increase the chances of becoming pregnant at a later age.[39] Successful pregnancies facilitated by fertility treatment have been documented in women as old as 67.[40] Studies since 2004 have shown that mammals may continue to produce new eggs throughout their lives, rather than being born with a finite number as previously thought. Researchers at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston say that if eggs are newly created each month in humans, current theories about the aging of the female reproductive system will have to be overhauled, although as of 2010 this is conjecture.[41][42]

According to the March of Dimes, "about 9 percent of recognized pregnancies for women aged 20 to 24 ended in miscarriage. The risk rose to about 20 percent at age 35 to 39, and more than 50 percent by age 42".[43] Birth defects, especially those involving chromosome number and arrangement, also increase with the age of the mother. The March of Dimes reports "At age 25, your risk of having a baby with Down syndrome is 1 in 1,340. At age 30, your risk is 1 in 940. At age 35, your risk is 1 in 353. At age 40, your risk is 1 in 85. At age 45, your risk is 1 in 35."[44]

Male fertility

Some research suggests that older males have decreased semen volume, sperm motility, and impaired sperm morphology.[45] In studies that controlled for female partner's age, comparisons between men under 30 and men over 50 found relative decreases in pregnancy rates between 23% and 38%.[45] Sperm count declines with age, with men aged 50–80 years producing sperm at an average rate of 75% compared with men aged 20–50 years and larger differences exist in the number of seminiferous tubules in the testes containing mature sperm:[45]

  • In males 20–39 years old, 90% of the seminiferous tubules contain mature sperm.
  • In males 40–69 years old, 50% of the seminiferous tubules contain mature sperm.
  • In males 80 years old and older, 10% of the seminiferous tubules contain mature sperm.[46]

Decline in male fertility is influenced by many factors, including lifestyle, environment and psychological factors.[47]

Some research suggests increased risks for health problems for children of older fathers, but no clear association has been proven.[48] A large scale study in Israel suggested that the children of men 40 or older were 5.75 times more likely than children of men under 30 to have an autism spectrum disorder, controlling for year of birth, socioeconomic status, and maternal age.[49] Increased paternal age has been suggested to correlate with schizophrenia but it is unproven.[50][51][52][53][54]

Australian researchers have found evidence to suggest obesity may cause subtle damage to sperm and prevent a healthy pregnancy. They reported fertilization was 40% less successful when the father was overweight.[55]

The American Fertility Society recommends an age limit for sperm donors of 50 years or less,[56] and many fertility clinics in the United Kingdom will not accept donations from men over 40 or 45 years of age.[57]

Historical trends by country

France

The French pronatalist movement from 1919 to 1945 failed to convince French couples they had a patriotic duty to help increase their country's birthrate. Even the government was reluctant in its support to the movement. It was only between 1938 and 1939 that the French government became directly and permanently involved in the pronatalist effort. Although the birthrate started to surge in late 1941, the trend was not sustained. Falling birthrate once again became a major concern among demographers and government officials beginning in the 1970s.[58] In mid-2018, there was a bill introduced to legalize single women and lesbian couples to get fertility treatment. At the beginning of 2020, the Senate approved the bill 160 votes to 116. They are a step closer to legalizing fertility treatments for all women regardless of sexual orientation or marital status. Soon there will be no reason for lesbian couples or single women to travel to be able to start their own family.[59]

United States

From 1800 to 1940, fertility fell in the US. There was a marked decline in fertility in the early 1900s, associated with improved contraceptives, greater access to contraceptives and sexuality information and the "first" sexual revolution in the 1920s.

 
United States crude birth rate (births per 1000 population); Baby Boom years in red.[60]

Post-WWII

After 1940 fertility suddenly started going up again, reaching a new peak in 1957. After 1960, fertility started declining rapidly. In the Baby Boom years (1946–1964), women married earlier and had their babies sooner; the number of children born to mothers after age 35 did not increase.[61]

Sexual revolution

After 1960, new methods of contraception became available, ideal family size fell, from 3 to 2 children. Couples postponed marriage and first births, and they sharply reduced the number of third and fourth births.[62]

Infertility

Infertility primarily refers to the biological inability of a person to contribute to conception. Infertility may also refer to the state of a woman who is unable to carry a pregnancy to full term. There are many biological causes of infertility, including some that medical intervention can treat.[63]

See also

Footnotes

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  5. ^ For detailed discussions of each measure see Paul George Demeny and Geoffrey McNicoll, Encyclopedia of Population (2003)
  6. ^ Another way of doing it is to add up the ASFR for age 10-14, 15-19, 20-24, etc., and multiply by 5 (to cover the 5 year interval).
  7. ^ Murphy, Michael (3 July 2013). "Cross-National Patterns of Intergenerational Continuities in Childbearing in Developed Countries". Biodemography and Social Biology. 59 (2): 101–126. doi:10.1080/19485565.2013.833779. PMC 4160295. PMID 24215254.
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  9. ^ Dommermuth, Lars; Klobas, Jane; Lappegård, Trude (2014). "Differences in childbearing by time frame of fertility intention. A study using survey and register data from Norway". hdl:10419/192763. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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  11. ^ Piyush Kant Rai; Sarla Pareek; Hemlata Joshi (1 January 2013). "Regression Analysis of Collinear Data using r-k Class Estimator: Socio-Economic and Demographic Factors Affecting the Total Fertility Rate (TFR) in India". Journal of Data Science. 11 (2): 323–342. doi:10.6339/JDS.2013.11(2).1030.
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  60. ^ CDC Bottom of this page https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/vsus.htm "Vital Statistics of the United States, 2003, Volume I, Natality", Table 1-1 "Live births, birth rates, and fertility rates, by race: United States, 1909-2003."
  61. ^ Oppenheimer, Valerie Kincade. Women's rising employment and the future of the family in industrial societies. OCLC 936722012.
  62. ^ Bailey, M. J. (1 February 2006). "More Power to the Pill: The Impact of Contraceptive Freedom on Women's Life Cycle Labor Supply". The Quarterly Journal of Economics. 121 (1): 289–320. doi:10.1093/qje/121.1.289. hdl:1803/15760.
  63. ^ Makar, Robert S.; Toth, Thomas L. (2002). "The Evaluation of Infertility". American Journal of Clinical Pathology. 117 Suppl: S95–103. doi:10.1309/w8lj-k377-dhra-cp0b. PMID 14569805.

References

This article incorporates material from the Citizendium article "Fertility (demography)", which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License but not under the GFDL.

  • Barrett, Richard E., Donald J. Bogue, and Douglas L. Anderton. The Population of the United States 3rd Edition (1997) compendium of data
  • Campagne, Daniel M (2013). "Can Male Fertility Be Improved Prior to Assisted Reproduction through The Control of Uncommonly Considered Factors?". International Journal of Fertility & Sterility. 6 (4): 214–23. PMC 3850314. PMID 24520443.
  • Coale, Ansley J. and Susan C. Watkins, eds. The Decline of Fertility in Europe, (1986)
  • Eversley, D. E. C. Social Theories of Fertility and the Malthusian Debate (1959) online edition
  • Garrett, Eilidh et al. Family Size in England and Wales: Place, Class, and Demography, 1891-1911(2001) online edition
  • Grabill, Wilson H.. Clyde V. Kiser, Pascal K. Whelpton. The Fertility of American Women (1958), influential study at the peak of the Baby Boom online edition
  • GuzmÁn, JosÉ Miguel et al. The Fertility Transition in Latin America (1996) online edition
  • Haines, Michael R. and Richard H. Steckel (eds.), A Population History of North America. Cambridge University Press, 2000, 752 pp. advanced scholarship
  • Hawes, Joseph M. and Elizabeth I. Nybakken, eds. American Families: a Research Guide and Historical Handbook. (Greenwood Press, 1991)
  • Klein, Herbert S. A Population History of the United States. Cambridge University Press, 2004. 316 pp
  • Knox, P. L. et al. The United States: A Contemporary Human Geography. Longman, 1988. 287 pp.
  • Kohler, Hans-Peter Fertility and Social Interaction: An Economic Perspective (2001) online edition
  • Leete, Richard. Dynamics of Values in Fertility Change (1999) online edition
  • Lovett, Laura L. Conceiving the Future: Pronatalism, Reproduction, and the Family in the United States, 1890–1938, (2007) 236 pages;
  • Mintz Steven and Susan Kellogg. Domestic Revolutions: a Social History of American Family Life. (1988)
  • Pampel, Fred C.; Peters, H. Elizabeth (1995). "The Easterlin Effect". Annual Review of Sociology. 21: 163–194. doi:10.1146/annurev.so.21.080195.001115. PMID 12291060.
  • Population Reference Bureau, Population Handbook (5th ed. 2004) (5th ed. 2004).
  • Reed, James. From Private Vice to Public Virtue: The Birth Control Movement and American Society Since 1830. 1978.
  • Tarver, James D. The Demography of Africa (1996) online edition
  • Weeks, John R. Population: An Introduction to Concepts and Issues (10th ed. 2007), standard textbook

Journals

Further reading

  • Josef Ehmer, Jens Ehrhardt, Martin Kohli (Eds.): . Historical Social Research 36 (2), 2011.
  • Jorge Chavarro (2009) The Fertility Diet: Groundbreaking Research Reveals Natural Ways to Boost Ovulation and Improve Your Chances of Getting Pregnant, McGraw-Hill Professional. ISBN 978-0-07-162710-8
  • Bock, John (March 2002). "Introduction: Evolutionary theory and the search for a unified theory of fertility". American Journal of Human Biology. 14 (2): 145–148. doi:10.1002/ajhb.10039. PMID 11891930. S2CID 27386441.
  • Jones C (March 2008). "Ethical and legal conundrums of postmodern procreation". Int J Gynaecol Obstet. 100 (3): 208–10. doi:10.1016/j.ijgo.2007.09.031. PMID 18062970. S2CID 13370582.
  • Fertility statistics from the Commission on Population Growth and the American Future (1972)

External links

  • , Data on fertility trends worldwide

fertility, this, article, about, fertility, humans, fertility, other, organisms, fecundity, fertility, plants, soil, soil, fertility, fertile, redirects, here, other, uses, fertile, disambiguation, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discus. This article is about fertility in humans For fertility of other organisms see fecundity For fertility of plants and soil see Soil fertility Fertile redirects here For other uses see Fertile disambiguation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is due to unclear definitions for fertility fecundity and derivative terms depending on whether the term is being used in demography epidemiology or clinical medicine For example fertility in demography is the actual production of live births by a female while in clinical medicine it refers to the potential for a woman to become pregnant Please help improve this article if you can March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may be confusing or unclear to readers Please help clarify the article There might be a discussion about this on the talk page March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Fertility is the capability to produce offspring through reproduction following the onset of sexual maturity The fertility rate is the average number of children born by a female during her lifetime and is quantified demographically Fertility is addressed when there is a difficulty or an inability to reproduce naturally which is referred to as infertility Infertility is widespread with fertility specialists available all over the world to assist mothers and couples who experience difficulties having a baby Human fertility depends on factors of nutrition sexual behaviour consanguinity culture instinct endocrinology timing economics personality 1 way of life and emotions Fertility differs from fecundity which is defined as the potential for reproduction influenced by gamete production fertilization and carrying a pregnancy to term 2 Where a woman or the lack of fertility is infertility while a lack of fecundity would be called sterility Contents 1 Demography 1 1 Period measures 1 2 Cohort measures 1 3 Social and economic determinants of fertility 1 4 Bongaarts model of components of fertility 2 Fertility biology 2 1 Menstrual cycle 2 2 Female fertility 2 3 Male fertility 3 Historical trends by country 3 1 France 3 2 United States 3 2 1 Post WWII 3 2 2 Sexual revolution 4 Infertility 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 References 8 Journals 9 Further reading 10 External linksDemography EditIn demographic contexts fertility refers to the actual production of offspring rather than the physical capability to produce which is termed fecundity 3 4 While fertility can be measured fecundity cannot be Demographers measure the fertility rate in a variety of ways which can be broadly broken into period measures and cohort measures Period measures refer to a cross section of the population in one year Cohort data on the other hand follows the same people over a period of decades Both period and cohort measures are widely used 5 Period measures Edit Crude birth rate CBR the number of live births in a given year per 1 000 people alive at the middle of that year One disadvantage of this indicator is that it is influenced by the age structure of the population General fertility rate GFR the number of births in a year divided by the number of women aged 15 44 times 1000 It focuses on the potential mothers only and takes the age distribution into account Child Woman Ratio CWR the ratio of the number of children under 5 to the number of women 15 49 times 1000 It is especially useful in historical data as it does not require counting births This measure is actually a hybrid because it involves deaths as well as births That is because of infant mortality some of the births are not included and because of adult mortality some of the women who gave birth are not counted either Coale s Index of Fertility a special device used in historical researchCohort measures Edit Countries by fertility rate as of 2020 Total fertility rate TFR the total number of children a woman would bear during her lifetime if she were to experience the prevailing age specific fertility rates of women TFR equals the sum for all age groups of 5 times each ASFR rate 6 Gross Reproduction Rate GRR the number of girl babies a synthetic cohort will have It assumes that all of the baby girls will grow up and live to at least age 50 Net Reproduction Rate NRR the NRR starts with the GRR and adds the realistic assumption that some of the women will die before age 49 therefore they will not be alive to bear some of the potential babies that were counted in the GRR NRR is always lower than GRR but in countries where mortality is very low almost all the baby girls grow up to be potential mothers and the NRR is practically the same as GRR In countries with high mortality NRR can be as low as 70 of GRR When NRR 1 0 each generation of 1000 baby girls grows up and gives birth to exactly 1000 girls When NRR is less than one each generation is smaller than the previous one When NRR is greater than 1 each generation is larger than the one before NRR is a measure of the long term future potential for growth but it usually is different from the current population growth rate Social and economic determinants of fertility Edit Main article fertility factor demography A parent s number of children strongly correlates with the number of children that each person in the next generation will eventually have 7 Factors generally associated with increased fertility include religiosity 8 intention to have children 9 and maternal support 10 Factors generally associated with decreased fertility include wealth education 11 12 female labor participation 13 urban residence 14 cost of housing 15 16 intelligence increased female age and to a lesser degree increased male age The Three step Analysis of the fertility process was introduced by Kingsley Davis and Judith Blake in 1956 and makes use of three proximate determinants 17 18 The economic analysis of fertility is part of household economics a field that has grown out of the New Home Economics Influential economic analyses of fertility include Becker 1960 19 Mincer 1963 20 and Easterlin 1969 21 The latter developed the Easterlin hypothesis to account for the Baby Boom Bongaarts model of components of fertility Edit Bongaarts proposed a model where the total fertility rate of a population can be calculated from four proximate determinants and the total fecundity TF The index of marriage Cm the index of contraception Cc the index of induced abortion Ca and the index of postpartum infecundability Ci These indices range from 0 to 1 The higher the index the higher it will make the TFR for example a population where there are no induced abortions would have a Ca of 1 but a country where everybody used infallible contraception would have a Cc of 0 TFR TF Cm Ci Ca CcThese four indices can also be used to calculate the total marital fertility TMFR and the total natural fertility TN TFR TMFR CmTMFR TN Cc CaTN TF Ci Intercourse The first step is sexual intercourse and an examination of the average age at first intercourse the average frequency outside marriage and the average frequency inside Conception Certain physical conditions may make it impossible for a woman to conceive This is called involuntary infecundity If the woman has a condition making it possible but unlikely to conceive this is termed subfecundity Venereal diseases especially gonorrhea syphilis and chlamydia are common causes Nutrition is a factor as well women with less than 20 body fat may be subfecund a factor of concern for athletes and people susceptible to anorexia Demographer Ruth Frisch has argued that It takes 50 000 calories to make a baby There is also subfecundity in the weeks following childbirth and this can be prolonged for a year or more through breastfeeding A furious political debate raged in the 1980s over the ethics of baby food companies marketing infant formula in developing countries A large industry has developed to deal with subfecundity in women and men An equally large industry has emerged to provide contraceptive devices designed to prevent conception Their effectiveness in use varies On average 85 of married couples using no contraception will have a pregnancy in one year The rate drops to the 20 range when using withdrawal vaginal sponges or spermicides This assumes the partners never forget to use the contraceptive The rate drops to only 2 or 3 when using the pill or an IUD and drops to near 0 for implants and 0 for tubal ligation sterilization of the woman or a vasectomy for the man Gestation After a fetus is conceived it may or may not survive to birth Involuntary fetal mortality involves natural abortion miscarriages and stillbirth a fetus born dead Human intervention intentionally causing abortion of the fetus is called therapeutic abortion Fertility biology EditWomen have hormonal cycles which determine when they can achieve pregnancy The cycle is approximately twenty eight days long with a fertile period of five days per cycle but can deviate greatly from this norm Men are fertile continuously but their sperm quality is affected by their health frequency of ejaculation and environmental factors 22 Fertility declines with age in both sexes For women the decline begins around the age of 32 and becomes precipitous at age 37 For men potency and sperm quality begins to decline around the age of 40 Even if an older couple does manage to conceive a child the pregnancy will be increasingly difficult for the mother and carries a higher risk of birth defects and genetic disorders for the child 23 Pregnancy rates for sexual intercourse are highest when it occurs every 1 or 2 days 24 or every 2 or 3 days 25 Studies have found no significant difference between different sex positions and pregnancy rate as long as it results in ejaculation into the vagina 26 Menstrual cycle Edit Chance of fertilization by menstrual cycle day relative to ovulation 27 Main article Menstrual cycle A woman s menstrual cycle begins as arbitrarily assigned with menses Next is the follicular phase where estrogen levels build as an ovum matures due to the follicular stimulating hormone or FSH within the ovary When estrogen levels peak it spurs a surge of luteinizing hormone LH which completes maturation and enables the ovum to break through the ovary wall 28 This is ovulation During the luteal phase following ovulation LH and FSH cause the post ovulation ovary to develop into the corpus luteum which produces progesterone The production of progesterone inhibits the LH and FSH hormones which in a cycle without pregnancy causes the corpus luteum to atrophy and menses to begin the cycle again Peak fertility occurs during just a few days of the cycle usually two days before and two days after the ovulation date 29 This fertile window varies from woman to woman just as the ovulation date often varies from cycle to cycle for the same woman 30 The ovule is usually capable of being fertilized for up to 48 hours after it is released from the ovary Sperm survive inside the uterus between 48 and 72 hours on average with the maximum being 120 hours 5 days These periods and intervals are important factors for couples using the rhythm method of contraception Female fertility Edit Further information Female infertility The average age of menarche in the United States is about 12 5 years 31 In postmenarchal girls about 80 of the cycles are anovulatory ovulation does not actually take place in the first year after menarche 50 in the third and 10 in the sixth year 32 Menopause occurs during a woman s midlife between ages 48 and 55 33 34 During menopause hormonal production by the ovaries is reduced eventually causing a permanent cessation of the creation of the uterine lining period This is considered the end of the fertile phase of a woman s life The predicted effect of age on female fertility in women trying to get pregnant without using fertility drugs or in vitro fertilization 35 At age 30 75 will conceive ending in a live birth within one year 91 will conceive ending in a live birth within four years At age 35 66 will conceive ending in a live birth within one year 84 will conceive ending in a live birth within four years At age 40 44 will conceive ending in a live birth within one year 64 will conceive ending in a live birth within four years 35 Studies of couples trying to conceive have yielded better results one 2004 study of 770 European women found that 82 of 35 to 39 year old women conceived within a year 36 while a study in 2013 of 2 820 Danish women saw 78 of 35 to 40 year olds conceive within a year 37 According to an opinion by the Practice Committee of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine specific coital timing or position and resting supine after intercourse have no significant impact on fertility Sperm can be found in the cervical canal seconds after ejaculation regardless of coital position 38 The use of fertility drugs and or invitro fertilization can increase the chances of becoming pregnant at a later age 39 Successful pregnancies facilitated by fertility treatment have been documented in women as old as 67 40 Studies since 2004 have shown that mammals may continue to produce new eggs throughout their lives rather than being born with a finite number as previously thought Researchers at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston say that if eggs are newly created each month in humans current theories about the aging of the female reproductive system will have to be overhauled although as of 2010 update this is conjecture 41 42 According to the March of Dimes about 9 percent of recognized pregnancies for women aged 20 to 24 ended in miscarriage The risk rose to about 20 percent at age 35 to 39 and more than 50 percent by age 42 43 Birth defects especially those involving chromosome number and arrangement also increase with the age of the mother The March of Dimes reports At age 25 your risk of having a baby with Down syndrome is 1 in 1 340 At age 30 your risk is 1 in 940 At age 35 your risk is 1 in 353 At age 40 your risk is 1 in 85 At age 45 your risk is 1 in 35 44 Male fertility Edit See also Paternal age effect and Male infertility Some research suggests that older males have decreased semen volume sperm motility and impaired sperm morphology 45 In studies that controlled for female partner s age comparisons between men under 30 and men over 50 found relative decreases in pregnancy rates between 23 and 38 45 Sperm count declines with age with men aged 50 80 years producing sperm at an average rate of 75 compared with men aged 20 50 years and larger differences exist in the number of seminiferous tubules in the testes containing mature sperm 45 In males 20 39 years old 90 of the seminiferous tubules contain mature sperm In males 40 69 years old 50 of the seminiferous tubules contain mature sperm In males 80 years old and older 10 of the seminiferous tubules contain mature sperm 46 Decline in male fertility is influenced by many factors including lifestyle environment and psychological factors 47 Some research suggests increased risks for health problems for children of older fathers but no clear association has been proven 48 A large scale study in Israel suggested that the children of men 40 or older were 5 75 times more likely than children of men under 30 to have an autism spectrum disorder controlling for year of birth socioeconomic status and maternal age 49 Increased paternal age has been suggested to correlate with schizophrenia but it is unproven 50 51 52 53 54 Australian researchers have found evidence to suggest obesity may cause subtle damage to sperm and prevent a healthy pregnancy They reported fertilization was 40 less successful when the father was overweight 55 The American Fertility Society recommends an age limit for sperm donors of 50 years or less 56 and many fertility clinics in the United Kingdom will not accept donations from men over 40 or 45 years of age 57 Historical trends by country EditMain article Historical demography See also Demographic transition France Edit Main article Demographics of France The French pronatalist movement from 1919 to 1945 failed to convince French couples they had a patriotic duty to help increase their country s birthrate Even the government was reluctant in its support to the movement It was only between 1938 and 1939 that the French government became directly and permanently involved in the pronatalist effort Although the birthrate started to surge in late 1941 the trend was not sustained Falling birthrate once again became a major concern among demographers and government officials beginning in the 1970s 58 In mid 2018 there was a bill introduced to legalize single women and lesbian couples to get fertility treatment At the beginning of 2020 the Senate approved the bill 160 votes to 116 They are a step closer to legalizing fertility treatments for all women regardless of sexual orientation or marital status Soon there will be no reason for lesbian couples or single women to travel to be able to start their own family 59 United States Edit Main article Demographic history of the United States From 1800 to 1940 fertility fell in the US There was a marked decline in fertility in the early 1900s associated with improved contraceptives greater access to contraceptives and sexuality information and the first sexual revolution in the 1920s United States crude birth rate births per 1000 population Baby Boom years in red 60 Post WWII Edit Main article Baby Boom After 1940 fertility suddenly started going up again reaching a new peak in 1957 After 1960 fertility started declining rapidly In the Baby Boom years 1946 1964 women married earlier and had their babies sooner the number of children born to mothers after age 35 did not increase 61 Sexual revolution Edit See also Sexual revolution in 1960s America After 1960 new methods of contraception became available ideal family size fell from 3 to 2 children Couples postponed marriage and first births and they sharply reduced the number of third and fourth births 62 Infertility EditMain article Infertility Infertility primarily refers to the biological inability of a person to contribute to conception Infertility may also refer to the state of a woman who is unable to carry a pregnancy to full term There are many biological causes of infertility including some that medical intervention can treat 63 See also EditBirth control Family economics Family planning Fecundity Fertility clinic Fertility tourism Fertility deity Fertility equality Fertility preservation Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority Natural fertility Oncofertility Reproductive health Sub replacement fertility Total fertility rate Vasectomy Fertility development controversy Fertility factor demography Income and fertility Fertility and intelligenceFootnotes Edit Skirbekk Vegard Blekesaune Morten 2014 2014 Personality Traits Increasingly Important for Male Fertility Evidence from Norway European Journal of Personality 28 6 521 529 doi 10 1002 per 1936 ISSN 0890 2070 S2CID 143134400 A B Schultz Paul T June 1976 Fertility Determinants A Theory Evidence and an Application to Policy Evaluation Population and Development Review 2 2 293 doi 10 2307 1972043 JSTOR 1972043 Frank O 27 September 2017 The demography of fertility and infertility www gfmer ch Last John M Fecundity and Fertility Encyclopedia of Public Health Archived from the original on 11 August 2009 via enotes com For detailed discussions of each measure see Paul George Demeny and Geoffrey McNicoll Encyclopedia of Population 2003 Another way of doing it is to add up the ASFR for age 10 14 15 19 20 24 etc and multiply by 5 to cover the 5 year interval Murphy Michael 3 July 2013 Cross National Patterns of Intergenerational Continuities in Childbearing in Developed Countries Biodemography and Social Biology 59 2 101 126 doi 10 1080 19485565 2013 833779 PMC 4160295 PMID 24215254 Hayford S R Morgan S P 1 March 2008 Religiosity and Fertility in the United States The Role of Fertility Intentions Social Forces 86 3 1163 1188 doi 10 1353 sof 0 0000 PMC 2723861 PMID 19672317 Dommermuth Lars Klobas Jane Lappegard Trude 2014 Differences in childbearing by time frame of fertility intention A study using survey and register data from Norway hdl 10419 192763 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Schaffnit S B Sear R 1 July 2014 Wealth modifies relationships between kin and women s fertility in high income countries Behavioral Ecology 25 4 834 842 doi 10 1093 beheco aru059 Piyush Kant Rai Sarla Pareek Hemlata Joshi 1 January 2013 Regression Analysis of Collinear Data using r k Class Estimator Socio Economic and Demographic Factors Affecting the Total Fertility Rate TFR in India Journal of Data Science 11 2 323 342 doi 10 6339 JDS 2013 11 2 1030 Health and Education Project Drawdown 2020 02 12 Retrieved 2020 12 04 Bloom David Canning David Fink Gunther Finlay Jocelyn 2009 Fertility female labor force participation and the demographic dividend Journal of Economic Growth 14 2 79 101 doi 10 1007 s10887 009 9039 9 Sato Yasuhiro March 2007 Economic geography fertility and migration Journal of Urban Economics 61 2 372 387 doi 10 1016 j jue 2006 08 002 Li Ang November 2019 Fertility intention induced relocation The mediating role of housing markets Population Space and Place 25 8 doi 10 1002 psp 2265 hdl 11343 286897 S2CID 200012816 Atalay Kadir Li Ang Whelan Stephen 25 June 2021 Housing wealth fertility intentions and fertility Journal of Housing Economics 54 101787 doi 10 1016 j jhe 2021 101787 S2CID 237787783 Bongaarts John March 1978 A Framework for Analyzing the Proximate Determinants of Fertility Population and Development Review 4 1 105 132 doi 10 2307 1972149 JSTOR 1972149 S2CID 27026630 Stover John September 1998 Revising the Proximate Determinants of Fertility Framework What Have We Learned in the past 20 Years Studies in Family Planning 29 3 255 267 doi 10 2307 172272 JSTOR 172272 PMID 9789319 Becker Gary S 1960 An Economic Analysis of Fertility In National Bureau Committee for Economic Research Demographic and Economic Change in Developed Countries a Conference of the Universities Princeton N J Princeton University Press Mincer Jacob 1963 Market Prices Opportunity Costs and Income Effects in C Christ ed Measurement in Economics Stanford CA Stanford University Press Easterlin Richard A March 1975 An Economic Framework for Fertility Analysis Studies in Family Planning 6 3 54 63 doi 10 2307 1964934 JSTOR 1964934 PMID 1118873 Skakkebaek Niels E Lindahl Jacobsen Rune Levine Hagai Andersson Anna Maria Jorgensen Niels Main Katharina M Lidegaard Ojvind Priskorn Laerke Holmboe Stine A Brauner Elvira V Almstrup Kristian 2021 12 15 Environmental factors in declining human fertility Nature Reviews Endocrinology 18 3 139 157 doi 10 1038 s41574 021 00598 8 ISSN 1759 5037 PMID 34912078 S2CID 245134205 George Korula Kamath Mohan 2010 Fertility and Age Journal of Human Reproductive Sciences 3 3 121 123 doi 10 4103 0974 1208 74152 PMC 3017326 PMID 21234171 How to get pregnant Mayo Clinic 2016 11 02 Retrieved 2018 02 16 Fertility problems assessment and treatment Clinical guideline CG156 National Institute for Health and Care Excellence Retrieved 2018 02 16 publication date February 2013 last updated September 2017 Dr Philip B Imler amp David Wilbanks The Essential Guide to Getting Pregnant PDF American Pregnancy Association Archived from the original PDF on 2018 06 01 Retrieved 2018 02 16 Dunson D B Baird D D Wilcox A J Weinberg C R July 1999 Day specific probabilities of clinical pregnancy based on two studies with imperfect measures of ovulation Human Reproduction 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partly longitudinal study Clinical Endocrinology 12 2 107 120 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2265 1980 tb02125 x PMID 6249519 S2CID 19913395 Takahashi TA Johnson KM May 2015 Menopause The Medical Clinics of North America 99 3 521 34 doi 10 1016 j mcna 2015 01 006 PMID 25841598 Bourgeois F John Gehrig Paola A Veljovich Daniel S 1 January 2005 Obstetrics and Gynecology Recall Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins ISBN 9780781748797 via Google Books a b A computer simulation run by Henri Leridon PhD an epidemiologist with the French Institute of Health and Medical Research Leridon H 2004 Can assisted reproduction technology compensate for the natural decline in fertility with age A model assessment Human Reproduction 19 7 1548 53 doi 10 1093 humrep deh304 PMID 15205397 Dunson David B Baird Donna D Colombo Bernardo 2004 Increased Infertility With Age in Men and Women Obstetrics amp Gynecology 103 1 51 6 doi 10 1097 01 AOG 0000100153 24061 45 PMID 14704244 S2CID 23061073 Rothman Kenneth J Wise Lauren A 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Sipos Attila Rasmussen Finn Harrison Glynn Tynelius Per Lewis Glyn Leon David A Gunnell David 2004 Paternal age and schizophrenia a population based cohort study BMJ 329 7474 1070 doi 10 1136 bmj 38243 672396 55 PMC 526116 PMID 15501901 Malaspina Dolores Corcoran Cheryl Fahim Cherine Berman Ariela Harkavy Friedman Jill Yale Scott Goetz Deborah Goetz Raymond Harlap Susan Gorman Jack 2002 Paternal age and sporadic schizophrenia Evidence for de novo mutations American Journal of Medical Genetics 114 3 299 303 doi 10 1002 ajmg 1701 PMC 2982144 PMID 11920852 Obesity Fat men linked to low fertility Sydney Morning Herald 18 October 2010 Retrieved 19 October 2010 Plas E Berger P Hermann M Pfluger H 2000 Effects of aging on male fertility Experimental Gerontology 35 5 543 51 doi 10 1016 S0531 5565 00 00120 0 PMID 10978677 S2CID 19875208 Age Limit of Sperm Donors in the United Kingdom Pdf file Archived October 3 2008 at the Wayback Machine Reggiani Andres Horacio Spring 1996 Procreating France The Politics of Demography 1919 1945 French Historical Studies 19 3 725 54 doi 10 2307 286642 JSTOR 286642 Pineau Elizabeth 2020 01 23 French Senate approves bill allowing IVF for single women lesbians Reuters Retrieved 2021 04 21 CDC Bottom of this page https www cdc gov nchs products vsus htm Vital Statistics of the United States 2003 Volume I Natality Table 1 1 Live births birth rates and fertility rates by race United States 1909 2003 Oppenheimer Valerie Kincade Women s rising employment and the future of the family in industrial societies OCLC 936722012 Bailey M J 1 February 2006 More Power to the Pill The Impact of Contraceptive Freedom on Women s Life Cycle Labor Supply The Quarterly Journal of Economics 121 1 289 320 doi 10 1093 qje 121 1 289 hdl 1803 15760 Makar Robert S Toth Thomas L 2002 The Evaluation of Infertility American Journal of Clinical Pathology 117 Suppl S95 103 doi 10 1309 w8lj k377 dhra cp0b PMID 14569805 References EditThis article incorporates material from the Citizendium article Fertility demography which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3 0 Unported License but not under the GFDL Barrett Richard E Donald J Bogue and Douglas L Anderton The Population of the United States 3rd Edition 1997 compendium of data Campagne Daniel M 2013 Can Male Fertility Be Improved Prior to Assisted Reproduction through The Control of Uncommonly Considered Factors International Journal of Fertility amp Sterility 6 4 214 23 PMC 3850314 PMID 24520443 Coale Ansley J and Susan C Watkins eds The Decline of Fertility in Europe 1986 Eversley D E C Social Theories of Fertility and the Malthusian Debate 1959 online edition Garrett Eilidh et al Family Size in England and Wales Place Class and Demography 1891 1911 2001 online edition Grabill Wilson H Clyde V Kiser Pascal K Whelpton The Fertility of American Women 1958 influential study at the peak of the Baby Boom online edition GuzmAn JosE Miguel et al The Fertility Transition in Latin America 1996 online edition Haines Michael R and Richard H Steckel eds A Population History of North America Cambridge University Press 2000 752 pp advanced scholarship Hawes Joseph M and Elizabeth I Nybakken eds American Families a Research Guide and Historical Handbook Greenwood Press 1991 Klein Herbert S A Population History of the United States Cambridge University Press 2004 316 pp Knox P L et al The United States A Contemporary Human Geography Longman 1988 287 pp Kohler Hans Peter Fertility and Social Interaction An Economic Perspective 2001 online edition Leete Richard Dynamics of Values in Fertility Change 1999 online edition Lovett Laura L Conceiving the Future Pronatalism Reproduction and the Family in the United States 1890 1938 2007 236 pages Mintz Steven and Susan Kellogg Domestic Revolutions a Social History of American Family Life 1988 Pampel Fred C Peters H Elizabeth 1995 The Easterlin Effect Annual Review of Sociology 21 163 194 doi 10 1146 annurev so 21 080195 001115 PMID 12291060 Population Reference Bureau Population Handbook 5th ed 2004 online 5th ed 2004 Reed James From Private Vice to Public Virtue The Birth Control Movement and American Society Since 1830 1978 Tarver James D The Demography of Africa 1996 online edition Weeks John R Population An Introduction to Concepts and Issues 10th ed 2007 standard textbookJournals EditDemography Scope and links to issue contents amp abstracts Journal of Population Economics Population and Development Review Aims and abstract amp supplement links Population Bulletin Each issue on a current population topic Population Studies Aims and scope Review of Economics of the HouseholdFurther reading EditJosef Ehmer Jens Ehrhardt Martin Kohli Eds Fertility in the History of the 20th Century Trends Theories Policies Discourses Historical Social Research 36 2 2011 Fertility treatment and clinics in the UK HFEA Jorge Chavarro 2009 The Fertility Diet Groundbreaking Research Reveals Natural Ways to Boost Ovulation and Improve Your Chances of Getting Pregnant McGraw Hill Professional ISBN 978 0 07 162710 8 Bock John March 2002 Introduction Evolutionary theory and the search for a unified theory of fertility American Journal of Human Biology 14 2 145 148 doi 10 1002 ajhb 10039 PMID 11891930 S2CID 27386441 Jones C March 2008 Ethical and legal conundrums of postmodern procreation Int J Gynaecol Obstet 100 3 208 10 doi 10 1016 j ijgo 2007 09 031 PMID 18062970 S2CID 13370582 Fertility statistics from the Commission on Population Growth and the American Future 1972 External links EditUnited Nations World Population Prospects the 2008 Revision Data on fertility trends worldwide Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fertility amp oldid 1113852028, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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