Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-mp689 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-23T15:25:40.295Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Effect of Famine on Fertility in a, Rural Area of Bangladesh

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 July 2008

Abdur Razzaque
Affiliation:
International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Dhaka, Bangladesh

Summary

This study investigates the effects of the 1974–75 famine on differential fertility in a rural population of Bangladesh, using information on household socioeconomic status collected in the 1974 census, and registration data on births, deaths and migrations for the period 1974–77 from the Demographic Surveillance System of the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh. Occupation of household head was taken as a measure of socioeconomic status. Total fertility rates were analysed for three periods: pre-famine, famine and post-famine. Overall fertility declined due to the famine by 34%, but this was compensated partially by a 17% increase in the post-famine period. Fertility of women of all ages and socioeconomic groups was affected by the famine, a more pronounced effect being observed among the poor. Fertility showed a higher post-famine recovery among women in the middle socioeconomic groups and in those aged 25–34 years.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1988

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Antonov, A. N. (1947) Children born during the siege of Leningrad in 1942. J. Pediat. 30, 3.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chen, L. C. & Chowdhury, A. K. M. A. (1977) The dynamics of contemporary famine. In: Proceedings of the International Population Conference in Mexico.Liège.Google Scholar
Cholera Research Laboratory (1978) Demographic Surveillance System, Matlab, Vol. 1, Methods and Procedures. Scientific Report no. 9, CRL, Dhaka.Google Scholar
Curlin, G. T. & Chowdhury, A. K. M. A. (1978) Recent Trends in Fertility and Mortality in Rural Bangladesh. Working Paper no. 3, CRL, Dhaka.Google Scholar
Ladurie, E. L. R. (1975) Famine amenorrhoea (seventeenth-twentieth centuries). In: Biology of Man in History. Edited by Foster, R. & Ranum, O.. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.Google Scholar
Langsten, R. L. (1980) Causes of Changes in Vital Rates: the Case of Bangladesh. PhD thesis, Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina.Google Scholar
Mosley, W. H. (1977) The effects of nutrition on natural fertility. In: IUSSP Seminar on Natural Fertility, Paris. IUSSP, Liège.Google Scholar
Muqtada, M. (1981) Poverty and famine in Bangladesh. Bangladesh Dev. Stud. 9, 1.Google Scholar
Ruzicka, L. T. & Chowdhury, A. K. M. A. (1978) Demographic Surveillance System—Matlab, Vol. 4, Vital Events and Migration, 1975. Scientific Report no. 12, CRL, Dhaka.Google Scholar
Smith, C. A. (1947) Effect of maternal malnutrition upon the newborn infant in Holland (1944–45). J. Pediat. 30, 3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stein, Z. & Susser, M. (1975) Fertility, fecundity, famine: food rations in the Dutch famine 1944–45 have a causal relation to fertility, and probably to fecundity. Hum. Biol. 47, 131.Google Scholar
Stein, Z. & Susser, M. (1977) Famine and fertility. In: Nutrition and Human Reproduction. Edited by Mosley, W. H.. Plenum, New York.Google Scholar
Sydenham, A. (1946) Amenorrhoea at Stanley camp, Hong Kong, during internment. Br. med. J. 2, 159.Google Scholar
Valaoras, V. G. (1946) Some effects of famine on the population of Greece. Milbank meml Fund Q. Bull. 24, 3.Google Scholar