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Chapter 42: The Risk of Motherhood

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half million women die each year from pregnancy and childbirth. 55% in Asia, 40% in Africa ... In many society, birth days are not noted, no western calendar. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 42: The Risk of Motherhood


1
Chapter 4-2 The Risk of Motherhood
  • 1 death in 16 pregnancies in Africa (1 in 9 in
    Ethiopia), 1 in 65 in Asia and 1 in 1400 in
    Europe (1/4800 in U.S. 1/8,200 in Britain, and 1
    in 17,400 in Sweden).
  • half million women die each year from pregnancy
    and childbirth
  • 55 in Asia, 40 in Africa
  • Most maternity death are preventable
    (malnutrition, anemia, lack of access to health
    care - due to womens status in society)
  • Article from Time (Sept, 2008)

2
Population Pyramid(Reading Assignment
page112-126, in Action)
  • What you can get from this pyramid? - impact of
    baby booms, wars, pop policy, external
    migrations, dependency ratio
  • Poor countries - proportion of female is lower
    (contrast to developed)
  • Austria - much more senior female
  • Russia - impact of wars show disrupted pattern
  • Percentage of pop in each age group strongly
    influences demand for goods and services within
    that countrys economy - more young need
    education/health facilities
  • Rate of Natural Increase CBR - CDR (no
    migration)

3
Figure 4-9
4
Figure 4-12- The progression of the boomers
  • The baby boom cohort born between 1946 and 1964
    through the US pop pyramid has been associated
    with changing American lifestyles and expenditure
    patterns. In 1970, national priorities focused on
    childhood and young adult interests and the
    needs, education, and support of younger age
    groups. At the turn of the 21st century, boomers
    formed the largest share of the working pop, and
    their wants and spending patterns shaped the
    national culture and economy. By 2030, the
    pyramid foretells, their desires and support
    needs now for retirement facilities and old-age
    care will again be central concerns.

5
Census Bureau population pyramid
  • Link (http//www.census.gov/ipc/www/idbpyr.html)

China - boys preference and one-child policy
causes 1 million excess males a year ,entering
marriage market beginning about 2100.
(never-married men outnumber their female
counterparts by 2 to 1) social problems,.. Practi
ce and answer questions on page 127 from Activity
book..(important..)
6
Dependency Ratio/Potential Support Ratio
  • (Non-economically active x 100) / Economically
    active
  • For example in 1994 UK population structure
  • 0 - 14 11.252 million
  • 15 - 64 37.690 million
  • 65 9 . 156 million
  • (11.252 9.156)100/37.69 54.15 per 100 in
    productive years.
  • PSR Potential Support Ratio
    ProductiveYear/Senior, dropped from 12 to 9, 4 in
    some countries, slide 6 - UK

7
Demographic Transition (fig 4-17)
  • Change of population associated with
    industrialization and urbanization
  • Fit Western Europe from agricultural to
    urban-developed countries, may not reflect truth
    in developing countries.
  • Stage 1 variable growth, replacement
    process-from a.d. 1 to a.d. 1650
  • Stage 2 death rate drops and birth rate still
    high, 1750 in W. Europe (now in Bhutan,
    Nicaragua, pop double in 20 to 25 years)
  • Stage 3 birth rate drops, pop begin to level off
  • Stage 4 very low birth and death rates.
  • Stage 5 negative growth

8
Convergence in fertility
  • High TFR in sub-Saharan and northern India will
    provide majority of world population growth to at
    least 2050.
  • Low TFR will have better life
  • High TFR consume social resources

9
The Cairo Plan
  • Abandoned population control
  • Giving women more control - increased educational
    access and economic opportunity for women and
    falling
  • Fund to stabilize population - Developing
    countries to pay 2/3, 1/3 to be paid by developed
    countries, so far 70 of 2/3 paid and only 35 of
    1/3 paid, U.S. failed to meet its agreed
    contribution.

10
Population Relocation
  • In the past, emigration affected countries
    population (fig 4.21)
  • In recent decades, only Afghanistan, Cuba, El
    Salvador, and Haiti have as many as 10 of the
    population emigrated.
  • Migrants add an unbalanced age and sex component
    to the group they join, heavily skewed in favor
    of young singles.

11
Population Density
  • Unevenly distributed - Four clusters East Asia,
    South Asia, Europe and NE US and SE Canada
  • US concentration,N and W Europe
  • Large pop in small part of land 50 in land, 9/10 in
  • Most in lowerland
  • 2/3 of pop within 300 mi of the ocean
  • East Asia - China,Japan, Taiwan and S Korea
  • South Asia - India, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri
    Lanka, plus Thailand, Cambodia, Indonesia, and
    Malaysia...
  • Ecumene - nonecumene cases of settlement in the
    nonecumene world is Andes Mountains and Mexico
    plateau

12
Population Density - 2
  • Crude (arithmetic) density - misleading
  • Physiological density - population over area of
    arable land, assuming all arable land is equally
    productive and comparably used. (Table 4.4)
  • Agricultural Density rural residents per unit
    of agriculturally productive land

13
Carrying Capacity
  • Overcrowding is a reflection of carrying capacity
    of a country not density.
  • Carrying Capacity - number of people an area can
    support on a sustained basis given the prevailing
    technology. (irrigation/fertilizing vs.
    slash-and-burn)
  • Himself
  • One small family
  • One large family
  • One small village
  • One large village
  • Sub-Saharan countries with pop increase and food
    production decreased. (fig 4.26)

14
Urbanization
  • More world pop increase in urban area.
  • 750 million will grow to 2.75 billion by 2030 in
    urban.
  • fig 4.27
  • fig 4.28

15
Population Data
  • Not reliable in some countries due to the
    isolation, insufficient fund, lack of training,
    high illiteracy.
  • Numbers still reported and published
  • Deaths are less completely reported than births
    throughout Asia, Africa is less complete and
    reliable compared to Asia
  • In many society, birth days are not noted, no
    western calendar. Chinese 1 year old when born,
    passing New Year plus another year.

16
Population Projection
  • Population Projection - factors taken in account
    include level of birth rates, literacy,
    education, govt policy, status of women, disease,
    socio-development (smaller families)
  • For Africa - predicting fertility rate is the
    most important, different results may emerge.
  • Ignorance of env. factors - soils, vegetation,
    water supplies, climate ---affecting carrying
    capacity.

17
Thomas Malthus
  • An Essay on the Principle of Population as It
    Affects the Future Improvement of Society -
    published in 1798
  • Population grows at Geometric rate and Food
    supply Arithmetic rate
  • UK would be struck by hunger in 50 yrs.- his
    prediction, butit did not occur, Due to..
  • Colonization
  • migration and
  • Food supply grows exponentially

18
Neo-Malthusianism
  • J-curve is converted to an S-curve in population
    growth. (4.30)
  • Top of the S-curve - population size consistent
    with and supportable by the resources (equivalent
    to the carrying capacity) - reached a homeostatic
    plateau.
  • Neo-Malthusianism - China/India, policies
    implemented to control pop.
  • Africa/Middle East - not respond to
    Neo-Malthusianism, but Iran developed a family
    planning program.

19
Homeostatic Plateaus (each new plateau represents
the conversion of the J-curve into S-curve
20
Momentum mv ?
  • Even fertility rats declines, number of births
    continues to grow due to age compositions (fig
    4.32)
  • Early 21st century Pop in developing country is
    much younger than others grow rapidly
    regardless of the level of childbearing until
    it reach to top part of the pyramids.
  • UK drop 2 million in 2025 while S. Korean add 2
    million due to the younger generation pop.

21
Aging
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