For all America’s health challenges—our sky-high rates of chronic disease, disability and early death—we are making progress on at least one front. The nation’s teen birth rate is falling fast. The 2011 rate was just half the 1991 rate, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and half of that decline occurred after 2007.
“The recent declines in teen childbearing are sustained, widespread, and broad-based,” the agency reports, and they parallel a steady rise in birth-control use among sexually active teens. Over the course of two decades, these trends prevented an estimated 3.6 million births among 15- to 19-year-old girls.
Babies born to teenagers are more likely to experience low birth weight and premature delivery and more likely to die during infancy. And like other public-health problems, this one tends to affect people already facing other disadvantages. The public costs approach $11 billion a year.
The new report shows lingering disparities by race and by region, but rates have declined fastest in the groups at highest risk. As this chart shows, black teens gave birth at 2.7 times the rate of white teens in 1991; the rate among Hispanic teens was 2.4 times that of whites. Among white teens the rate fell by 50% over the next two decades, but among blacks it fell by 60%, and the Hispanic teen birth rate fell by 53%.









