By Our Correspondent, DAKAR Senegal
Senegalese are having fewer and fewer children. A comparison according to different sources showed that since 2005 the TFR has fallen from 5.3 children per woman in 2005 to 4.7 in 2019.
However, putting the report into perspective, fertility
rates by age group increase rapidly with age, rising from 71 per thousand to
15-19 years to a peak of 228 per thousand at 25-29 years, and remain relatively
high in the 30-34 (195 per thousand) and 35-39 (171 per thousand ) age groups.
Beyond that, the study noted, fertility levels decline
fairly rapidly to 74 per thousand at 40-44 years of age and 21 per thousand at
45-49 years of age.
In more detail, the data show very clear differences in
fertility by residence and region.
For example, urban women have significantly lower fertility
than rural women (3.8 children per woman versus 5.6 children per woman),
according to ANSD. Similarly, the results by region show that the average
number of children per woman is higher in the central and southern regions than
at the national level (5.4 and 5.3 versus 4.7 respectively).
Moreover, ANSD experts pointed out that the proportion of
women who want to limit their offspring increases rapidly with the number of
living children: from about 1 percent among women without children or with one
living child, it rises to 3 percent among women with two living children, to 21
percent among those with four, reaching a maximum of 60 percent among women
with six or more children.
The proportion of women who no longer want children has not
changed in recent years, remaining at 20 percent in 2014 and 19 percent in 2018
and 2019.
In addition, the study revealed that a comparison with
previous surveys showed that the proportion of teenage girls who have already
started their reproductive life has tended to decrease over the past decade,
from 19 percent in 2010-11 to 14 percent in 2019.
The 2019 Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) also looked at
infant and child mortality. And in this regard, the document pointed out, a
review of the evolution of child mortality over the last 15 years using data
from the various surveys confirmed that, regardless of the component of child
mortality, levels have declined significantly in the period after 2005.
For example, the report stated that from 61 per thousand
according to the 2005 DHS, the child mortality rate dropped to 39 ‰ in the 2015
DHS and to 29 ‰ in the current survey. In the same period the decline in child
mortality also continues: the rate has dropped from 64 ‰ to 21 ‰ and 8 ‰.
Overall, child mortality has fallen from 121 ‰ to 59 ‰ and
37 ‰, ANDS concluded.
More specifically, the 2015 DHS argued that infant
mortality declined from 48 ‰ in the 10-14 year period before the survey to 44 ‰
5- 9 years before the survey to 29 ‰ in the 0-4 year period before the survey.
In this period, child mortality would also have declined
more significantly (from 29 ‰ to 8 ‰) and infant and child mortality would have
declined from 75 ‰ to 37 ‰.
On a completely different point, ANSD study returned to the
nutritional status of children. The results showed that, overall, 8 percent of
children are emaciated, including 1 percent in the severe form.
The highest percentage of acutely malnourished children is
in the 48-59 month age group (13 percent). The level of acute malnutrition is
higher in the northern and southern regions (13 percent and 11 percent). -
Africa
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