Health
How Birth Control, Girls’ Education Can Slow Population Growth – Global Health News Wire
Widespread use of contraceptives and, to a lesser extent, girls’ education through at least age 14 have the greatest impact in bringing down a country’s fertility rate. Education and family planning have long been tied to lower fertility trends. But new resea…

New University of Washington research analyzes global fertility trends.Mustafa Omar/Unsplash
Widespread use of contraceptives and, to a lesser extent, girls’ education through at least age 14 have the greatest impact in bringing down a country’s fertility rate.
Education and family planning have long been tied to lower fertility trends. But new research from the University of Washington analyzes those factors to determine, what accelerates a decline in otherwise high-fertility countries.
In a…
-
Noosa News14 hours ago
Suncorp Stadium upgrades to rival Sydney as seat capacity and infrastructure prioritised
-
Business16 hours ago
DroneShield announces new $13 million counter-drone facility as employees top 400
-
Business18 hours ago
Why you should sell CBA, Lynas, and Tabcorp shares today
-
General23 hours ago
Hopes for peace but pain lingers on Oct 7 anniversary