Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-fbnjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T10:44:21.009Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A Demographic and social study of fertility in rural New Guinea

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 July 2008

Anne Ring
Affiliation:
Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, University of Papua New Guinea, Port Moresby, and Department of Public Health, Papua, New Guinea
Roy Scragg
Affiliation:
Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, University of Papua New Guinea, Port Moresby, and Department of Public Health, Papua, New Guinea

Extract

The commencement of demographic transition with rapid mortality decline and changing fertility patterns has been studied prospectively for 20 years among over 5000 persons in Buka and New Ireland—two pre-industrial societies of New Guinea. The demographic study has been complemented by a detailed social study of fertility variables in three societies.

At the commencement of the study the New Ireland society had a high level of primary and secondary sterility of gonorrhoeal origin which disappeared among the younger women after mass penicillin therapy. The mean age at marriage is no longer immediately post-menarchal; the mean age of mother at birth of first child varied between 18·7 and 20·6 years; and the mean age of cessation of reproduction approached 44 years.

The three societies each show differing degrees of demographic transition with social patterns in one hardly changed by culture contact through to occasional voluntary use of introduced contraceptive techniques. The most important changes in fertility variables over the 20-year survey were the decrease in duration of post-partum abstinence from intercourse, the increase in continuity of cohabitation in marriage and other pronatal effects.

The demographic assessment of Buka showed age specific fertility rates for 1962–67 of over 300 per each 5-year age group between the ages of 20 and 39 with total fertility reaching a maximum of 8680 and with consequent changes in family size. The mean birth interval for births fell from 3·15 years for persons with first births between 1947 and 1953 to 2·13 years where the first birth was after 1961. There are several levels of reproduction with a mean birth interval for women for the most productive group of 2·00 years. The current mean interval for births of 2·16 years is consistent with a maximum biological level of reproduction for a society using breast feeding as the sole significant negative factor affecting fertility.

The associated rapid mortality decline and improved health of the community were due to the control of malaria and available rural health services as part of authoritarian health measures. Fertility decline consistent with transition theory would require community participation in child spacing to re-establish the traditional family size of three to four surviving children. This would entail the introduction of biochemical and mechanical contraception to fill the role previously taken by post-partum abstinence from intercourse and high infant mortality.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1973

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Allen, M.R. (1967) Male Cults and Secret Initiations in Melanesia. Melbourne University Press.Google Scholar
Beecroft, T.C. (1967) Child rearing in the highlands of New Guinea. Med. J. Aust. ii, 811.Google Scholar
Billings, D.E. & Peterson, N. (1967) Malanggan and Memai in New Ireland. Oceania, 38, 24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Black, R. (1962) The Control of Reproduction Among Primitive Peoples. A paper read at a meeting on Population at the Australian Academy of Science, Melbourne Group.Google Scholar
Blackwood, B. (1931) Report on field work in Buka and Bougainville. Oceania, 2, 199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blackwood, B. (1935) Both Sides of Buka Passage. Clarendon Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Bonte, M. & van Balen, H. (1969) Prolonged lactation and family spacing in Ruanda. J. biosoc. Sci. 1, 97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carr-Saunders, A.H. (1936) World Population. Clarendon Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Davis, K. & Blake, J. (1956) Social structure and fertility: an analytic framework. Econ. Develop. Cult. Change, 4, 211.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Douglas, J.W.B. (1946) The extent of breast feeding in Great Britain in 1946. J. Obstet. Gynaec. Brit. Emp. 57, 343.Google Scholar
Epstein, A.L. & Epstein, T.S. (1962) A note on population in two Tolai settlements. J. Polynesian Soc. 71, 70.Google Scholar
Freedman, R. (1963) Norms for family size in undeveloped areas. Proc. Roy. Soc. B, 159, 220.Google Scholar
Gabaldon, A. (1961) Changing problems of preventive medicine in the tropics. Proc. Fourth Conf. Indust. Council for Trop. Health, p. 30. Harvard School of Public Health.Google Scholar
Henry, L. (1961) Some data on natural fertility. Eugen. Q. 8, 87.Google ScholarPubMed
Hertzler, J.O. (1956) The Crisis in World Population. Lincoln.Google Scholar
Hoffman, Dr. (1913) Non-official report of the conditions of native health in northern New Ireland. Government Gazette. German New Guinea, Amtsblatt. 114.Google Scholar
Karunaratne, W.A. (1959) The influence of malaria control on vital statistics in Ceylon. J. trop. Med. Hyg. 62, 84.Google ScholarPubMed
McArthur, N. (1967) Island Populations of the Pacific. A.N.U. Press.Google Scholar
Martin, W.J., Morley, D. & Woodland, M. (1964) Intervals between births in a Nigerian village. J. trop. Pediat. 10, 83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nag, M. (1962) Factors Affecting Human Fertility in Non-Industrial Societies. Yale University, Publication in Anthropology.Google Scholar
Olusanya, P.O. (1969) Modernization and the level of fertility in western Nigeria. Int. Pop. Conf. 1, 812.Google Scholar
Potter, R.G. (1965) Lactation and its effects on birth intervals in eleven Punjab villages, India. J. chron. Dis. 18, 1125.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Powdermaker, H. (1930) Reports on research in New Ireland. Oceania, 1, 355.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Powdermaker, H. (1931) Vital statistics of New Ireland as revealed in genealogies. Hum. Biol. 3, 351.Google Scholar
Powdermaker, H. (1933) Life in Lesu. Williams and Norgate, London.Google Scholar
Ridley, J.C., Shefs, M.C., Lingner, J.W. & Menken, J.A. (1967) The effects of changing mortality on natality. Milbank meml. Fund. q. Bull. 45, 77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scragg, R.F.R. (1957) Depopulation in New Ireland—A Study of Demography and Fertility. Territory of Papua and New Guinea Health Monograph.Google Scholar
Scragg, R.F.R. (1967) Mortality decline in a sample population in New Guinea. Contributed Papers, IUSSP Conf., Sydney, p. 562.Google Scholar
Scragg, R.F.R. (1969) Mortality changes in rural New Guinea. Papua N. Guinea med. J. 12, 73.Google Scholar
Scragg, R.F.R. (1972) Population change in New Guinea. Papua N. Guinea med. J. (in press).Google Scholar
Smith, T.E. (1960) The Cocos-Keeling Islands: a demographic laboratory. Popul. Stud. 14, 94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, T.E. (1969) Components of the decline of fertility with advancing age. Int. Pop. Conf. 1, 395.Google Scholar
Smythe, W.E. (1966) Population dynamics of the Kikuya of Fergusson Island. Papua N. Guinea med. J. 9, 139.Google Scholar
Talawar, P.P. (1965) Note on the tests of significance of intervals between confinements of different birth orders. Eugen. Q. 12, 251.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tietze, C. (1957) Reproductive span and rate of reproduction among Hutterite women. Fert. Steril. 8, 89.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
van de Hoeven, J.A. (1956) Factors which influence the chances of life in new born infants in Netherlands New Guinea. Docum. Med. geogr. trop.(Amst.) 8, 291.Google Scholar
van de Kaa, D.J. (1967) Fertility patterns in New Guinea. Contributed Papers, IUSSP Conf., Sydney, p. 337.Google Scholar
Whiting, J.M.W., Kluckohn, R. & Anthony, A. (1958) The Function of Male Initiation Ceremonies at Puberty. Readings in Social Psychology. Ed. MacCoby, E.E. et al. New York.Google Scholar
Wolfers, D. (1967) A method of analysis of contemporary birth interval data. Contributed Papers, IUSSP Conf., Sydney, p. 289.Google Scholar