Reducing adolescent fertility and addressing the multiple factors underlying it are essential for improving sexual and reproductive health and the social and economic well-being of adolescents. There is substantial agreement in the literature that women who become pregnant and give birth very early in their reproductive lives are subject to higher risks of complications or even death during pregnancy and birth and their children are also more vulnerable. Therefore, preventing births very early in a woman’s life is an important measure to improve maternal health and reduce infant mortality. Furthermore, women having children at an early age experience a curtailment of their opportunities for socioeconomic improvement, particularly because young mothers are unlikely to keep on studying and, if they need to work, may find it especially difficult to combine family and work responsibilities. The adolescent birth rate also provides indirect evidence on access to pertinent health services since young people, and in particular unmarried adolescent women, often experience difficulties in access to sexual and reproductive health services.
Definition:
Annual number of births to females aged 10-14 or 15-19 years per 1,000 females in the respective age group
Disaggregation:
Age group: 10-14 years of age; 15-19 years of age
Method of measurement
The adolescent birth rate is computed as a ratio. The numerator is the number of live births to women aged 15-19 years, and the denominator an estimate of exposure to childbearing by women aged 15-19 years. The computation is the same for the age group 10-14 years.
The numerator and the denominator are calculated differently for civil registration, survey and census data.
Computation formula:
Adolescent Birth Rate (15-19) = (number of births to women ages 15-19/mid-year population of women ages 15-19) * 1,000
In the case of civil registration data, the numerator is the registered number of live births born to women aged 15-19 years during a given year, and the denominator is the estimated or enumerated population of women aged 15-19 years.
In the case of survey data, the numerator is the number of live births obtained from retrospective birth histories of the interviewed women who were 15-19 years of age at the time of the births during a reference period before the interview, and the denominator is person-years lived between the ages of 15 and 19 years by the interviewed women during the same reference period. The reported observation
year corresponds to the middle of the reference period. For some surveys without data on retrospective birth histories, computation of the adolescent birth rate is based on the date of last birth or the number of births in the 12 months preceding the survey.
With census data, the adolescent birth rate is computed on the basis of the date of last birth or the number of births in the 12 months preceding the enumeration. The census provides both the numerator and the denominator for the rates. In some cases, the rates based on censuses are adjusted for underregistration based on indirect methods of estimation. For some countries with no other reliable data, the own-children method of indirect estimation provides estimates of the adolescent birth rate for a number of years before the census.
Last updated: 2023-03-31
Whenever data are available, adolescent fertility at ages 10-14 years are also computed.
For a thorough treatment of the different methods of computation, see Handbook on the Collection of Fertility and Mortality Data, United Nations Publication, Sales No. E.03.XVII.11, https://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/standmeth/handbooks/Handbook_Fertility_Mortality.pdf)..In
direct methods of estimation are analyzed in Manual X: Indirect Techniques for Demographic Estimation,
United Nations Publication, Sales No. E.83.XIII.2.
M&E Framework:
Impact
Method of estimation:
For civil registration data, data on births or the adolescent birth rate are obtained from country-reported
data from the United Nations Statistics Division (UNSD) or regional Statistics Divisions or statistical units
(ESCWA, ESCAP, CARICOM, SPC). The population figures are obtained from the last revision of the United
Nations Population Division World Population Prospects and only exceptionally from other sources.
Survey data are obtained from national household surveys that are internationally coordinated—such as
the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS), the Reproductive Health Surveys (RHS), and the Multiple
Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS)—and other nationally-sponsored surveys. Data from censuses are
obtained from country-reported data from the UNSD or regional Statistics Divisions or statistical units
(ESCWA, ESCAP, CARICOM, SPC) or directly from census reports.
Method of estimation of global and regional aggregates:
The adolescent birth rates reported for global and regional aggregates are based on the average of
estimated adolescent birth rates for two, contiguous five-year periods (e.g., 2015-2020 and 2020-2025
for year 2020) published in United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population
Division (2022), World Population Prospects 2022 (http://esa.un.org/unpd/wpp/)
The age-specific fertility rates for global and regional aggregates from World Population Prospects (WPP)
are based on population reconstruction at the country level and provide a best estimate based on all the available demographic information. WPP considers potentially as many types and sources of empirical estimates as possible (including retrospective birth histories, direct and indirect fertility estimates), and the final estimates are derived to ensure as much internal consistency as possible with all other demographic components and intercensal cohorts enumerated in successive censuses.
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