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📖 Core Concepts Fertility – ability to have offspring (actual births). Fecundity – biological capacity to reproduce (doesn’t guarantee births). Fertility rate – average number of children a person has over a lifetime. Infertility / Subfertility / Sterility – inability to conceive after 1 yr, reduced but possible conception, and complete inability, respectively. Period demographic measures – snapshots of births in a given year (e.g., Crude Birth Rate, General Fertility Rate, Child‑Woman Ratio). Cohort demographic measures – synthetic‑cohort estimates of completed fertility (Total Fertility Rate, Gross Reproduction Rate, Net Reproduction Rate). Bongaarts’ Model – total fertility = total fecundity × multiplicative proximate‑determinant indices (marriage, postpartum infecundability, contraception, abortion). Menstrual cycle phases – Follicular (FSH ↑ → estrogen ↑), Ovulation (LH surge), Luteal (progesterone ↑, LH/FSH suppressed). Fertile window – 5 days centered on ovulation (‑2 days to + 2 days); ovum viable ≈ 48 h, sperm up to 120 h. Age‑related fertility decline – women start notable decline 32 yr, steep after 37 yr; men begin subtle decline 40 yr (volume, motility, morphology). --- 📌 Must Remember Crude Birth Rate (CBR) = (Live births ÷ mid‑year population) × 1,000. General Fertility Rate (GFR) = (Births ÷ women 15‑44) × 1,000. Total Fertility Rate (TFR) = Σ (5 × age‑specific fertility rates). Gross Reproduction Rate (GRR) = expected female births per woman (ignores female mortality). Net Reproduction Rate (NRR) = GRR × survival to age 49; NRR = 1 → exact generational replacement. Bongaarts formula: $$\text{TFR}= \text{TF}\times Cm \times Ci \times Ca \times Cc$$ (All \(C\) indices 0–1; lower values suppress TFR.) Peak female fertility: 75 % conceive within 1 yr at age 30; drops to 44 % at age 40. Sperm survival: average 48–72 h; max ≈ 120 h. Menopause: permanent end of fertility, typically 48–55 yr. --- 🔄 Key Processes Three‑Step Proximate Determinant Analysis Identify biological, behavioral, social factors → quantify as indices → multiply by total fecundity (TF). Menstrual Cycle Hormone Cascade Day 0: menses → FSH ↑ → follicle growth → estrogen ↑ → LH surge → ovulation → corpus luteum → progesterone ↑ → LH/FSH suppressed → luteolysis → next menses. Bongaarts Calculation Steps Estimate TF (often ≈ 15 births/woman). Compute each \(C\) index (e.g., \(Cm = \frac{\text{married women’s fertility}}{\text{total fertility}}\)). Multiply to obtain TFR; optionally derive TMFR = TN × \(Cc\) × \(Ca\). --- 🔍 Key Comparisons Fertility vs. Fecundity – Fertility = actual births; Fecundity = biological potential. Crude Birth Rate vs. General Fertility Rate – CBR uses total population; GFR restricts denominator to women 15‑44. Total Fertility Rate vs. Net Reproduction Rate – TFR counts all births; NRR adjusts for female mortality and counts only daughters. Ovulation vs. Luteal Phase – Ovulation = release of egg (fertile peak); Luteal = progesterone‑dominant phase, prepares uterus. Male vs. Female Age Decline – Female fertility drops sharply after 32 yr; male decline is gradual, mainly in sperm quality after 40 yr. --- ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings “Fertility rate = fecundity” – they differ; fecundity is potential, fertility is realized. “Men are always fertile” – sperm quality and quantity decline with age/obesity. Confusing \(Ci\) (post‑partum infecundability) with \(Ca\) (abortion) – they are distinct proximate indices. Assuming TFR = average children per woman today – TFR is a synthetic cohort estimate, not a realized average. Thinking sperm survive >5 days – maximum ≈ 120 h (5 days), not longer. --- 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition Multiplicative Filter Model – imagine total fecundity as water; each \(C\) index is a sieve that lets a fraction through. The more restrictive the sieve, the lower the final flow (TFR). Fertile Window as a “Sliding 5‑Day Box” – place a 5‑day window centered on ovulation; any intercourse inside yields the highest conception odds. Age‑Fertility Curve – visualise a steep downward slope after the early 30s for women; a gentle slope starting at 40 for men. --- 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases High religiosity or strong maternal support can boost fertility despite typical socioeconomic suppressors. Net Reproduction Rate = 1 even if TFR ≠ 2 (e.g., high female mortality offset by higher TFR). Obesity in fathers can cut fertilization success by 40 % even when female factors are optimal. First year after menarche: 80 % of cycles are anovulatory → low conception probability despite menstrual bleeding. --- 📍 When to Use Which CBR – quick population‑level birth overview when age‑sex data unavailable. GFR – compare fertility across regions with differing age structures (focus on reproductive‑age women). TFR – assess long‑term replacement level & policy planning (goal ≈ 2.1). GRR vs. NRR – use GRR for raw female birth potential; switch to NRR when mortality matters (e.g., developing countries). Bongaarts model – dissect why TFR deviates from TF; apply when you have data on marriage, contraception, postpartum infecundability, and abortion rates. Three‑Step analysis – ideal for research papers or policy briefs that need to attribute fertility changes to proximate causes. --- 👀 Patterns to Recognize Socio‑economic decline pattern – higher education, urban residence, and wealth → lower fertility. Historical U.S. trend – steep drop after 1960 (new contraceptives) → fertility below replacement. Age‑related decline – look for a “step‑down” in conception percentages at ages 30, 35, 40 for women. Male factor impact – obesity or advanced age often appears as a hidden variable in couples’ infertility cases. --- 🗂️ Exam Traps Choosing the wrong denominator – mixing up CBR (total pop) with GFR (women 15‑44) leads to mis‑calculated rates. Mis‑labeling indices – selecting \(Ca\) (abortion) when the question asks about postpartum infecundability (\(Ci\)). Assuming TFR = 2 → replacement – replacement depends on NRR = 1, not TFR = 2, especially with high female mortality. Over‑estimating sperm lifespan – answer choices suggesting >5 days survival are distractors. Confusing “total natural fertility” (TN) with “total marital fertility” (TMFR) – TN = TF × \(Ci\); TMFR adds contraception and abortion indices. ---
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