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Low Birth Rate "Approaching Epidemic" In Denmark - Foreign Affairs - Nairaland

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Low Birth Rate "Approaching Epidemic" In Denmark by akanke79: 6:05pm On Jul 12, 2013
Medical professionals encourage government to create incentives for couples to have more children
Could a little Boyz II Men lead to a few more of these in Denmark?
The birth rate among Danish women is dangerously low, according to a recently-published report from the Copenhagen hospital, Rigshospitalet. The 57,916 children born in 2012 represent the lowest number in several years. By comparison, more than 65,000 children were born in 2008.
[img]http://cphpost.dk/sites/default/files/styles/400x300/public/20130212-baby_31Mb.jpg[/img]
Even though most couples, when asked, say that they would like to have two or three children, more than one in five couples end up childless and the current rate of 1.7 children per family is not enough to maintain the current population.

Part of the problem is that there are fewer women in the country of childbearing age. Couples are also waiting longer to start families, which often makes conception harder, and recent studies have also pointed to low sperm quality in Danish men.

Researchers from Rigshospitalet encouraged the government to make it more attractive for young couples to start a family.

"Many wait too long to have children, creating a greater need for fertility treatments,” Søren Ziebe, a clinical supervisor at Rigshospitalet, wrote in the report. “There is a need to raise awareness, as the problem is approaching epidemic levels."

Ziebe and the other researchers pointed out that in the 1970s, the average age that a woman gave birth to her first child was 24 years old. Today, the average age is 29 and the number of women that are waiting until they are over 35 to conceive is increasing.

"The understanding that we are, reproductively speaking, very old when we reach that age, is being forgotten,” wrote the researchers. “We are living longer, but the period in which we should be having children remains the same.”

More and more couples are using fertility treatments to conceive. Every tenth child in the country is born after fertility treatments.

"Women are waiting longer, and that causes problems in getting the children they want, and fertility treatments do not always solve the problem," Katrine Bay, one of the researchers involved with the report, told Politiken newspaper.

Jørgen Grinsted, a doctor from the private fertility clinic Trianglen, confirmed that both the number of customers and the age of females seeking treatment are rising. Today, more than 40 percent of the women in his clinic are over 40 years old. In 2011, the clinic started fertility treatments for more than 2,000 women, compared to just over 1,000 in 2004.

Grinsted recommended that the government allow women to keep their eggs frozen at clinics for longer than the currently allowed five years. That would enable a healthy 23-year-old to freeze her eggs when young and use them when she was older and ready to have children.

"It would put women on more equal footing with men,” Grinsted told Politiken. “I believe that women should be allowed to keep their eggs frozen until they are 46, the last year they can get fertility treatments in Denmark.”

The Rigshospitalet researchers want parliament to establish a working group of professionals, government leaders and patients to work on the low birth rate problem.

Recently faced with a similar dilemma, Russian president Vladimir Putin is rumoured to have invited the R&B group Boyz II Men to sing their romantic ballads like ‘I’ll Make Love to You’ at a pre-Valentine’s Day concert in an attempt to inspire the populace to take matters into their ends and nudge up the birth rate.

Although it is unclear how much direct contact Putin had in booking the band, the idea that he was involved is not farfetched, based on some his earlier policies. In 2007, he started the ‘Mother Russia’ program that paid mothers who had a second child the Russian equivalent of 50,000 kroner. Thanks to the initiative, Russia's fertility rate has increased.


http://cphpost.dk/news/national/low-birth-rate-approaching-epidemic
Re: Low Birth Rate "Approaching Epidemic" In Denmark by segzyj(m): 6:18pm On Jul 12, 2013
Na so
Re: Low Birth Rate "Approaching Epidemic" In Denmark by psucc(m): 6:19pm On Jul 12, 2013
This is just the beginning of matters, by the time their parliament must have given the devil a rule over them, then there will recognize the sovereinty of the Almighty God. Development, Civilization and technology is driving the West mad.
Re: Low Birth Rate "Approaching Epidemic" In Denmark by makahlj2: 12:49pm On Jul 15, 2013
akanke79: , and recent studies have also pointed to low sperm quality in Danish men.

What? I know for a fact that Denmark is a top exporter of sperm for all the Europe. Lol. Europe is finished smiley
Re: Low Birth Rate "Approaching Epidemic" In Denmark by Rossikk(m): 12:25pm On Jul 17, 2013
Same story in America. White population to become a minority within the next 20 years. Reason - Low sperm count among white men.

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