الزراعة والتنمية الريفية والغابات
District-level variations in the quality of mortality data in thailand
Different studies on variations of cause-specific mortality provide different policy implications and suggestions. Some findings mirror existing health care and services. Costantini and others (2000) concluded that differences in proportions of cancer patients dying at home across 13 provinces in Italy could not be explained by the known determinants, suggesting inappropriate hospital admission in the terminal phase of cancer. A study on geographical variations in breast cancer mortality in older American women by Goodwin and others (2002) suggested ways to improve the quality of breast cancer care. Some studies suggest further research in specific areas.
A turnaround in India’s urbanization
Demographic transition in Southern Asia: Challenges and opportunities
Health-care decisions of older persons in India
Civil registration, human rights, and social protection in Asia and the Pacific
70 years of fertility change in Korea: New estimates from 1916 to 1985
Among the countries of Asia, the Republic of Korea presents an outstanding example of rapid and sustained fertility decline. Within the short span of a quarter century, fertility in the Republic of Korea has changed from a level typical of traditional familistic societies to a level resembling that of the more developed countries. Thus, Korean fertility levels and trends and their estimation continue to be of interest because of their implications to other developing countries currently seeking to achieve fertility reductions.
Education and fertility in two Chinese provinces: 1967-1970 to 1979-1982
The rapid decline of fertility in China during the 1970s coincided with a rapid rise in the educational attainment of Chinese women. This coincidence raises questions about the role and importance of educational change in China’s fertility decline, which this article attempts to answer.
Contraceptive (In)security in South-East Asia
Population information
Information plays a critical role in changing people’s and Governments’ attitudes about population issues. Because information is considered one of the pillars upon which the success of population policies and programmes is based, the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) made it a priority area of its population activities since the formation of its Clearing-house and Information Section as part of the Population Division.
The evolution of population policy in Viet Nam
Proximate determinants and their influences on fertility reduction in viet nam
Abstracts
Strengthening civil registration and vital statistics in the Asia-Pacific region: learning from country experiences
Social impact of international migration and remittances in Central Asia
Guidelines for contributors
HIV and AIDs stigma and discrimination in China: Results from a national survey
Worldwide, stigma and discrimination have been identified as tremendous barriers to addressing the HIV/AIDS epidemic, beginning with Jonathan Mann in the 1980s (Mann, 1987), and by others (UNAIDS, 2001, 2008; Reidpath, Brijnath and Chan, 2005; APN+, 2004). Stigma was defined by Goffman (1963) nearly half a century ago as a discrediting attribute about an individual or group that serves to devalue that person or group in the eyes of the society. More recent theoretical frameworks suggest that stigmatization and discrimination are manifest in a number of contexts, including within families, communities, schools, employment, travel/ migration opportunities, health-care settings and HIV/AIDS programmes (Parker and Aggleton, 2002), and in religion and the media (Malcolm and others, 1998). A study in four countries in Asia found pervasive discrimination, with 80 per cent of respondents having experienced AIDS-related discrimination, including nearly one in five facing discrimination within their families and in their workplaces (APN+, 2004). In a review of interventions to reduce HIV/AIDS stigma, Brown, MacIntyre and Trujillo (2003) noted that stigma affects prevention behaviours, test-seeking, care-seeking, quality of care provided to positive clients, and perceptions and treatment of people living with HIV and AIDS by communities and families. Parker and others (2002) contend that HIV/AIDS-related stigma is often layered upon other stigma, for example, the one associated with engaging in illegal behaviour, such as sex work and drug use. Furthermore, families with HIV-positive members often face stigma from the community. In order to combat stigma and the associated discrimination, it is important to understand the knowledge, beliefs and attitudes and how they vary across groups within a country. Such knowledge is critical for designing interventions to reduce stigma and discrimination.
Young, low-parity women: Critical target group for family planning in Bangladesh
After years of persistent low levels, contraceptive prevalence in Bangladesh is beginning to rise, albeit slowly (figure 1). This occurs none too soon. Bangladesh, densely populated and poor, endures a population growth rate that is still quite high, even by third world standards.
Obituary: Wasim Alimuz Zaman, Ph.D. 1948-2014
Gender accounting of consumption and the life-cycle deficit for india
Women and population aging
One of the dramatic demographic changes that is taking place, in both developing and industrialized countries, is the increasing proportion of elderly (people 60 years of age and above) in the total population.
Combined statement by civil society organizations at the sixth Asian and Pacific Population Conference, Bangkok, 16-20 September 2013
Human resource requirements for meeting the needs of ageing societies
While health care is accorded priority by Asian and Pacific countries in addressing the rapid ageing of their populations, only some include long-term care as part of a continuum of care available in institutional and non-institutional settings with formal and informal caregivers. Measures for avoidable (preventive and amenable) mortality contribute towards preventive long-term care. The delivery of health care by health professionals, allied health professionals and auxiliary care workers is discussed in this review, with examples of the training of nurses and social workers to show the range and variety of training available in the region. Caregiving is increasingly undertaken by migrant domestic and care workers and by volunteer health workers, often as part of community organizations. Institutional care is often perceived as abandonment and de-institutionalization is thus pursued as an “asset-light” policy option. But it should be supported as ageing-in-place, community-based services and platforms, with the integration of health and social care, innovative approaches for engagement and participation, and technology, all of which require trained human resources with the necessary skills and competencies. Other measures to strengthen care provision and support to older persons include expanding filial piety to social piety, changing mindsets and combating ageism for social solidarity and collective responsibility. It also includes measurement and monitoring mechanisms for accountability and course correction.
Towards a research agenda for civil registration and vital statistics in the Asia-Pacific region
Population conference
The International Union for the Scientific Study of Population (IUSSP) held its Twenty-first International Population Conference at New Delhi from 20 to 27 September 1989. The Conference, which was organized at the invitation of the Indian Association for the Study of Population (IASP), was opened by India’s Prime Minister Rajiv Ghandi.
Fertility transition
The importance of fertility transition in Asia begins with the magnitude of its influence on the world population growth. Asia constituted 58.2 per cent of the world’s population in 1985. Because it is likely to remain in excess of 55 per cent well into the first quarter of the next century, Asia will continue to dominate the global population phenomena and its growth. In particular, China and India have a dominant role in influencing the Asian demographic situation, because together they comprise the majority of the region’s total population.
The 1988 demographic survey of Viet Nam
The 1988 Viet Nam Demographic Survey was the first country-wide demographic survey of Viet Nam. The sample was drawn according to the sample design recommended by the World Fertility Survey (WFS). It was a three-stage random probability sample of 4,800 households in 12 provinces and 151 communes.
Integration of population and development
Because of the complexity of development planning, demographic factors inevitably enter into the planning process. The integration of those factors is widely recognized as an effective strategy in both development planning and population planning.
Has Thailand’s fertility decline stalled?
Probably the most important demographic development to occur during the last quarter century has been the onset of fertility decline in a number of third world countries. While most Sub-Saharan African countries as well as a number in the Middle East and West Asia have yet to participate in this phenomenon, fertility in countries elsewhere in Asia and in much of Latin America has started down a path towards levels far lower than have ever prevailed in their modern histories. Given that mortality declines preceded the fall in fertility, and that most of these populations have been experiencing unprecedented rapid population growth rates at levels that would lead to extraordinary numbers of people in just decades, most observers concerned with population matters view the onset of fertility decline as a logical and welcome development.
Introduction
Three decades of breast-feeding trends in Singapore
Despite the well-documented benefits of breast-feeding for both infant and mother, breast-feeding has, until recently, been given little support. World Health Organization data (WHO, 1981) support the conclusion that, as countries undergo socio-economic development, there is a tendency for the incidence of breast-feeding to decline (Kent, 1981). Many factors contribute to such changes in breast-feeding behaviour. Whilst urbanization and industrialization have been associated historically with declines in breast-feeding (and indeed still appear to be in certain developing countries), the proportion of mothers now returning to breast-feeding in some industrialized countries, e.g. Sweden and the United States of America, is increasing.
New directions in family planning communication: 12 predictions for the 1990s
Family planning communication is not a new subject in Asia. Organized family planning programmes began in Asia as early as the 1960s. Bangladesh, China and Taiwan province of the People’s Republic of China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, the Republic of Korea, Singapore, Sri Lanka and Thailand have led the way not only in offering family planning services but also in developing information campaigns and educational programmes to inform and persuade people to practise family planning. While other parts of the world were debating whether the words “family planning” and specific types of contraceptives could even be mentioned in public, Governments in Asia were subsidizing mass media promotion of smaller families and of specific contraceptive methods. The evidence is clear that Asia has led the world in family planning communication.
Community characteristics, leaders, fertility and contraception in Bangladesh
Fertility behaviour is determined mainly by the characteristics of individuals, but also by social, cultural, community and institutional factors. The primary aim of this article is to investigate the influence of social and economic institutions on fertility and contraception.
Breast-feeding in Asia: An overview
Breast-feeding has always been synonymous with human reproduction and the nourishment of infants. Yet it is only in the last 20-25 years that its effects on fertility and child survival have been systematically investigated. In light of the accumulated scientific evidence, the promotion of breast-feeding through family planning and maternal and child health programmes is increasingly considered to be a public health policy priority, especially in developing societies. In some countries, explicit policies to promote breast- feeding have been enacted. Research is being undertaken to assess the infant feeding situation, monitor changes, if any, in infant feeding patterns, and evaluate the impact of specific policies and programmes.
Technologies to reach older persons with health-care services
This review examines telemedicine practices, which are separated into teleconsultations and telemonitoring, that have applied information and communication technologies (ICT) for the delivery of health-care services to older persons in the Republic of Korea, Japan, Australia and China. The practices featured from the Republic of Korea and Japan are telemedicine pilot projects to manage chronic disease patients more efficiently and at lower cost. The projects included a health management curriculum, with emphasis on nutrition and exercise guidance. The participants in each pilot project found the services to be helpful in managing their health; the project evaluation findings also indicated several meaningful medical improvements. In Australia, a Home Monitoring of Chronic Disease for Aged Care Project was designed in 2014 to manage ageing patients with chronic diseases at home through various telemedicine devices. In China, the Ningbo Cloud Hospital was established in 2015 to control increasing health-care expenses and to resolve difficulties for individuals to see a doctor. More than 2,000 patients are now registered for online video consultations and prescriptions. The featured examples illustrate how the application of telemedicine to a health-care system not only promotes accessibility between doctors and patients but can save on construction costs for new facilities and the cost of supplying medical personnel in remote areas, which thus can help reduce national medical expenses. However, to initiate ICT-based health-care service delivery, governments in Asia and the Pacific need to first establish related policies that promote telemedicine.
Aging in China: Demographic alternatives
As a consequence of their rapid fertility declines and pronounced mortality improvements in recent years, many of the developing countries in Asia have become increasingly aware of a number of serious aging problems (Ogawa, 1988a). More importantly, primarily because the demographic transition in these Asian countries has been substantially shorter than in the developed countries (Leete, 1987) the process of population aging in the former has been and will be considerably faster than that observed in the latter. China provides a salient example of fast population aging among the developing countries in Asia.
Exploring demographic and socio-economic factors influencing utilization of integrated child development services
Trends in fertility and mortality in Fiji based on the 1986 census
Fiji is made up of about 332 islands in the south-west Pacific. About a hundred of the islands are usually inhabited; most of the remaining islands are used for temporary residence and for occasional plantation. Fiji has a long history of census taking: although the first census was taken in 1879, it was only a very rough head count. A more comprehensive census was taken in 1881; this census, in fact, inaugurated the series of decennial censuses which continued until 1921, after which there was, however, a break in this series. The next census was not conducted until 15 years later, in 1936. From then on the censuses have been conducted every 10 years; the last census took place in 1986.
Beyond demographic transition: Industrialization and population change in Singapore
Singapore is one of the first Asian countries to have adopted a vigorous population programme as part of its socio-economic development strategy. In 1966, when the Singapore Government established the Singapore Family Planning and Population Board (SFPPB) to offer family planning services and to disseminate the small family norm, the population was growing at about 2 per cent per year and the total fertility rate (TFR) stood at 4.7. Having just separated from Malaysia, Singapore was trying hard to gain a firm political and economic footing. The withdrawal of foreign military personnel based in Singapore further aggravated the unsettling economic base. The need to curb rapid population growth was obvious, and population control was viewed as critical in balancing the available economic resources with the demands of an increasing population.
Status of Women and Family Planning: The Indian Case
The degree of personal autonomy of women in India varies from state to state. Several studies have noted the regional variations in the status of women in India (Karve, 1965; Srinivas, 1978; Mitra, 1979; Dyson and Moore, 1983). Women’s personal autonomy is manifested in practices such as veiling (purdah or ghungat), pressures to get girls married at a very young age (partly to protect their virginity and partly to ensure compliance with parents’ wishes in respect of the choice of spouse), denying or limiting educational or employment opportunities to girls, attaching differential values to sons and daughters, restricting the ability of women to control their fertility by pressuring them to produce children (particularly male heirs), restricting their access to information, and economic and health resources etc.
Levels, trends and determinants of fertility in China: 1973-1987
With the development of its family planning programme, China has achieved great success since the 1970s in slowing the growth of its population. This is evident in the rapid decline in fertility: the total fertility rate (TFR) declined from the 1960s average of 5.68 to 4.0 in the 1970s and to only 2.46 for the first eight years of the 1980s.
Breast-feeding trends and the breast-feeding promotion programme in the Philippines
In the context of East and South-east Asia, the Philippines is an underachieving country; living standards have not improved much in recent years. (Table 1 provides some relevant data about the Philippines.) In this setting, breast-feeding is especially important for child health and child nutrition as well as child spacing. The Philippines is one of several developing countries having comparable national data on breast-feeding trends for the past several decades.
Gender Dimension of Migration from Central Asia to the Russian Federation
The article considers the relationship between migration from Central Asia to the Russian Federation and gender relations. In particular, the paper describes the age-sex composition of the migration flows from three countries of the subregion (Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan) and discusses the case of Kyrgyzstan with its active female migration. Male migrants are more often employed in construction and are paid more than female migrants, who work mostly in trade and services. However, men and women show almost no difference in complying with migration laws, vulnerability in interactions with the state, relations with employers and apartment owners as well as transnational practices. The article also considers possibilities for family reunification, and gendered differences in inter-ethnic communication. The article concludes that further studies are required, and that assistance mechanisms are required for women who do not receive financial assistance from their migrant husbands. The article also finds that migrants’ sexual and reproductive behaviour is characterized by limited access to information about risks and also requires thorough study.
China: Surplus labour and migration
The populations of most developing countries have been growing rapidly in recent decades. During the 1970s and 1980s, the number of persons of working age has often grown even faster than total populations. The struggle to provide enough employment for a burgeoning labour force often fails, resulting in high unemployment plus a large part of the working population “visibly underemployed” (working fewer hours or days than they would like) or “invisibly underemployed” (doing work of extremely low productivity for low income or underutilizing skills).
Breast-feeding: Patterns and correlates in Nepal
This note presents the prevalence and duration of breast-feeding in Nepal and discusses some of the socio-demographic factors influencing breast-feeding as well as the determinants of breast-feeding.
Breast-feeding trends, patterns and policies in Thailand
Thailand is in a relatively advantageous position compared with most other countries in the region with respect to data to document trends and patterns of breast-feeding and related infant feeding practices. Relevant questions, even if not always strictly comparable, have been included in a series of nationally representative surveys conducted during the last two decades. The information provided by these surveys makes clear that a trend towards a decline in the duration of breast-feeding was underway during the decade of the 1970s, but that during the 1980s the decline halted. In addition, the proportion initiating breastfeeding was high throughout the two-decade period and appears to have recently increased to the point where, at the national level, it is now close to universal.
Population strategies for the 1990s
A note by the ESCAP secretariat to the forty-seventh session of the Commission, which will be held at Seoul, Republic of Korea, from 1 to 10 April 1991, reviews a variety of topics related to population. These include a survey of the population situation in the region, including policies and programmes; the state of socio-economic development in the region and development issues closely linked with population, such as the status of women, quality of population, environment, poverty and rural-urban migration. It also considers various multidisciplinary strategies and programmes of the secretariat such as cross- disciplinary training, multidisciplinary research, technical advisory services and population information.
Population projections for Myanmar, 1983-2013
Myanmar is experiencing relatively high fertility and declining mortality rates. In 1973, the population size was nearly 29 million. It increased to 35 million in 1983 with an annual intercensal growth rate of 2.02 per cent (Union of Burma, 1986a; Part 1, p. 14). Since 1948, when it became independent, Myanmar has struggled for economic development and an improved quality of life. But there have been many obstacles and socioeconomic development remains the main challenge to be met. Successive attempts have been made by means of various short- and long-term plans.
Impact of a self-reliance programme on family planning activities in Bangladesh
Despite the long history of the family planning programme in Bangladesh, the contraceptive prevalence level remains low and consequently the rate of population growth has remained persistently high. Several factors can be attributed to low contraceptive prevalence. The most important factors are low levels of socio-economic development, the lower status of women, the strong preference for sons, the high level of infant and child mortality and limited access to health and family planning facilities.
Continuation and effectiveness of programme and non-programme methods of family planning in Sri Lanka
The clinical efficacy of various contraceptive methods is well known. However, relatively little is known about their use-effectiveness (which refers to both technical failure of a method and the failure to use a method properly in actual life conditions, especially in developing countries). Use-effectiveness data for programme as well as non-programme methods are necessary for assessing the impact of contraceptive use on fertility (Bongaarts and Potter, 1983).
