Each year, the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) tracks all reported births and deaths in the United States,
including teen birth rates, and releases that information part of the National Vital
Statistics Reports. The just-released report for the year 2006 shows that the
birth rate for teenagers aged 15–19 years increased, up 3 percent from 2005
after declining for the previous 14 years. Teen
birth rates increased significantly in 26 states between 2005 and 2006,
representing nearly every region of the country. But not every state was
affected; some states have teen birth rates that are less than half of the
national average. Below is a list of the states with the lowest teen birth
rates in 2006. The rates per 1,000 females aged 15-19 are listed in
parentheses.
The top 10 states with the lowest
teen birth rates for 2006 are:
- New Hampshire (18.7
births per 1,000 females aged 15-19). Virtually unchanged from a year ago,
New Hampshire
has the lowest teen birthrate in the nation, as it did in 2005.
- Vermont
(20.8). New Hampshire’s
Northeastern neighbor was also second on the list last year and saw little
change in the teen pregnancy rate in 2006.
- Massachusetts (21.3).
Another New England state, Massachusetts
also had no change in its teen birth rate from last year and is less than
half of the national average.
- Connecticut (23.5).
This densely populated state had a similar teen birth rate in 2006 as in
2005, but this represents a decrease of 42 percent since 1991.
- New Jersey
(24.9). The Garden
State actually saw a
six percent increase in teen births from 2005, but remains in the fifth
spot.
- New York (25.7).
The Nation’s second largest state saw a three percent decline in teen
birth rate from 2005 to 2006, climbing two spots on the list.
- Maine (25.8).
Maine’s teen birth rate stayed about the
same in 2006 but the state dropped one spot after being passed up by New York.
- North Dakota (26.5).
This Northern state saw only modest declines in the teen birth rate form
the years 1991 to 2005: 16 percent was the smallest decline in the
country. But they are making up for that now, with the teen birth rate
declining 11 percent in the last year alone.
- Rhode Island
(27.8). With a decline of 11 percent over the 2005 teen birth rate, the
Nation’s smallest state moved up four spots and into the top ten.
- Minnesota (27.9).
A seven percent increase in teen birth rate dropped Minnesota down three spots to number
ten on the list.
If you have questions about teenage pregnancy, join the Healia Health
Community for Teen Health or the Healia Health
Community for Pregnancy, or ask the experts at Healia Health
Communities.
Related blog post: The Top 10 States with the Highest Teen
Birth Rates
Source: CDC, Births: Final data for 2006. National vital statistics reports; vol 57 no 7. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics. 2009. http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr57/nvsr57_07.pdf
Photo: LabGP&SigOther, Flickr, Creative Commons