Jersey births and breastfeeding profile 2018
Produced by the
Public Health (Strategic Policy, Planning and Performance)
Authored by
Statistics Jersey (Public Health)
and published on
29 Mar 2018
Prepared internally, no external cost
Summary
The Jersey births and breastfeeding profile 2018 uses data collected over the period 2016 – 2017 to examine and update changes in birth and breastfeeding patterns on the Island. The profile refers to all births to Jersey resident mothers, including those babies born off-Island.
In 2017
- there were 954 live births to Jersey residents, the smallest annual number of births since 2002
- the proportion of births by caesarean section (30 per cent) was higher than in England
- older mothers were more likely to elect to have a caesarean section
- the proportion of mothers classed as 'older' (aged 35 or over) in Jersey has been increasing from around a quarter (24 per cent) of all live births in 2000 to around a third (33 per cent)
- over three-quarters (78 per cent) of mothers were breastfeeding their babies before being discharged from maternity care
- three out of five babies (60 per cent) were being breastfed at 6-8 weeks of age
- at the 9 month – 1 year check, one in five (20 per cent) babies were receiving breastmilk
- rates of breastfeeding continue to be higher in rural parishes than in urban and sub-urban parishes
- over the period 2014-2016, infant mortality in Jersey was 0.7 per 1,000 live births, significantly lower than the rate of 3.9 per 1,000 live births in England
Jersey births and breastfeeding profile 2018