Cohort Measures of Fertility - PPT by Shubradip Ghosh
Cohort Measures of Fertility - PPT by Shubradip Ghosh
Cohort Measures of Fertility - PPT by Shubradip Ghosh
FERTILITY
By SHUBRADIP GHOSH
MSc. Biostatistics and Epidemiology
1st year 2021
WHAT IS COHORT FERTILITY?
A cohort is a group of women born in the same year. Cohort fertility analyses explore
whether current generations of women of childbearing age(15 to 45) are reaching,
exceeding or falling short of the fertility levels of previous generations.
The cohort fertility rate is the total number of children women from a
specific birth year give birth to throughout their lives. It cannot be
computed until the end of their childbearing years. This is generally
assumed to be at age 50.
1st child
WOMAN
the probability of a woman having
another child given that she has already
had a certain number. This ratio is
normally calculated for marriage or birth
cohorts of women who have completed 2nd child
their childbearing.
3rd child
What is the
probability
of having 4th
child?
completed fertility rate of a cohort
(CFR)
The PPR is then calculated by taking successive ratios which give the
proportion of women with at least n children becoming women with
at least n+1 children
Birth Interval
(Closed Birth Interval & Open Birth Interval)
Any birth interval between two successive births of women of specified birth order, say between 2 and 3, aggregated
over a group of women in a population can be used in a number of ways to study the fertility patterns in the population.
The extent to which family planning methods have limited childbearing and
postponed the interval can be studied by analysing data on closed and open
birth intervals.
When women stop childbearing after a specific birth order, say 3, then there will be no
closed interval after the third child and the open interval keeps on increasing with time
Thus the ratio of the average open interval to the last closed interval is an indicator of
the extent to which the women have stopped childbearing with the last child.
(1) The duration of infertile period (mostly due to post-partum amenorrhoea) following the earlier birth
(2) The periods of menstruating intervals following resumption of menstruation following the last birth
(3) The periods of infertile periods associated with abortions (induced or spontaneous between the two live
births
(4) The period of pregnancy associated with the latter child (usually assumed as
9 months).
Models have been developed for each of these four components and used to estimate the fecundability parameter, incidence of
abortions and post-partum amenorrhoea