Abstract

The sex ratio at birth (SRB, i.e., the ratio of male to female births) in Vietnam has been imbalanced since the 2000s. Previous studies have revealed a rapid increase in the SRB over the past 15 years and the presence of important variations across regions. More recent studies suggested that the nation’s SRB may have plateaued during the 2010s. Given the lack of exhaustive birth registration data in Vietnam, it is necessary to estimate and project levels and trends in the regional SRBs in Vietnam based on a reproducible statistical approach. We compiled an extensive database on regional Vietnam SRBs based on all publicly available surveys and censuses and used a Bayesian hierarchical time series mixture model to estimate and project SRB in Vietnam by region from 1980 to 2050. The Bayesian model incorporates the uncertainties from the observations and year-by-year natural fluctuation. It includes a binary parameter to detect the existence of sex ratio transitions among Vietnamese regions. Furthermore, we model the SRB imbalance using a trapezoid function to capture the increase, stagnation, and decrease of the sex ratio transition by Vietnamese regions. The model results show that four out of six Vietnamese regions, namely, Northern Midlands and Mountain Areas, Northern Central and Central Coastal Areas, Red River Delta, and South East, have existing sex imbalances at birth. The rise in SRB in the Red River Delta was the fastest, as it took only 12 years and was more pronounced, with the SRB reaching the local maximum of 1.146 with a 95% credible interval (1.129, 1.163) in 2013. The model projections suggest that the current decade will record a sustained decline in sex imbalances at birth, and the SRB should be back to the national SRB baseline level of 1.06 in all regions by the mid-2030s.

Highlights

  • The sex ratio at birth (SRB, i.e., the ratio of the number of male to female live births) varies between 1.03 and 1.07 under natural circumstances [1, 2]; in recent decades, the combined effects of the preference for a male child due to social, cultural, political, and economic reasons; fertility decline; and accessible and affordable abortion and sex detection technology have led to sex-selective abortion in several countries

  • Prenatal sex selection has resulted in distorted levels of the SRB in various South Asian, East Asian, and East European countries where SRBs can be as high as 1.1–1.2 male births per female birth [3, 4]

  • Vietnam’s case has long drawn the attention of observers, as no increase in the SRB was witnessed until the beginning of the century—at a time when the SRB in nearby China was already close to a record 1.2 male births per female birth

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The sex ratio at birth (SRB, i.e., the ratio of the number of male to female live births) varies between 1.03 and 1.07 under natural circumstances [1, 2]; in recent decades, the combined effects of the preference for a male child due to social, cultural, political, and economic reasons; fertility decline; and accessible and affordable abortion and sex detection technology have led to sex-selective abortion in several countries. Prenatal sex selection has resulted in distorted levels of the SRB in various South Asian, East Asian, and East European countries where SRBs can be as high as 1.1–1.2 male births per female birth [3, 4]. Several countries in South Asia and elsewhere where a son’s preference prevails may witness rising SRBs in the future as average fertility levels decline [5]. The census and survey data failed to provide evidence of any distinct sex imbalances at birth [6, 7] despite several facilitating preconditions of prenatal sex selection such as the steady reduction of birth rates, emergence of modern private clinics, free and unrestricted access to abortion services, and strongly entrenched preference for a male child [8]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call