Data and Statistics Index Page
- In 2005, 87,088 infants were born to Indiana residents. The number of live births represents a slight decrease from 2004 (87,125). For details, see Table 1.
- Of the 87,088 infants born to Indiana residents in 2005, 84,064 were single births, 2,842 were twins, 144 were triplets, 28 were quadruplets, and 9 were quintuplets. (NOTE: See definition of "multiple birth" in the Glossary of Terms).
- During 2005, 44,698 (51.3%) of the infants were male and 42,388 (48.7%) were female, resulting in a sex ratio of 1,054 males per every 1,000 females. For details, see Table 1.
- In 2005, there were 9,604 live births to mothers under 20 years of age–11.0 percent of the total number of live births. Of these, 7,653 were born to white women under age 20 (10.1% of the white births) and 1,859 were born to black women under age 20 (18.9% of the black births). For full age-group details, see Table 2 and Table 3. For by-county details, see Table 29.
- For a large majority of births, both the mother and the father were white (74.9%). Both the mother and father were black for 6.4 percent of births. For 13.8 percent of births, the race of the father was not reported. For details, see Table 10.
- The age-specific birth rate for women ages 15-19 was slightly lower in 2005 (43.2) than in 2004 (43.5) For details, see Table 13. For by-county details, see Table 30.
- The 2005 general fertility rate (GFR) was 67.2 births per 1,000 women ages 15-44 compared to a 2004 GFR of 67.0 per 1,000 women ages 15-44. For details, see Table 13. For by-county details, see Table 31.
- In 2005, the total fertility rate (TFR) was 2,057 for all races combined. This rate is 2.0 percent below the theoretical replacement level rate of 2,100. The TFRs for white and black women were 2,060 and 2,221, respectively. For details, see Table 13. For by-county details, see Table 31.
- The percentage of liveborn infants classified as low birthweight (LBW = less than 2,500 grams or 5 lb 8 oz) increased from 7.5 percent in 1995 to 8.3 percent in 2005. Infants born to black mothers were almost twice as likely to be LBW (13.4%) than were infants born to white mothers (7.6%). For details, see Table 6 and Table 14. For by-county details, see Table 32.
- Approximately 1.5 percent of all liveborn infants were classified as very low birthweight (VLBW = less than 1,500 grams or 3 lb 5 oz). Infants born to black mothers were more than twice as likely to be VLBW (3.3%) than were infants born to white mothers (1.3%). For details, see Table 15. For by-county details, see Table 32.
- In Indiana, about one fifth (17.9%) of women who gave birth in 2005 reported smoking during pregnancy, compared with only 10.2 percent nationwide in 2004 (latest data available). White mothers (18.7%) in Indiana were more likely than black mothers (14.0%) to report smoking during pregnancy in 2005. For details, see Table 20 and Table 21. For by-county details, see Table 32.
- Statewide, 78.9 percent of mothers began prenatal care in the first trimester of pregnancy. White mothers were more likely to have early prenatal care (80.8%) than were black mothers (64.8%). For details, see Table 24. For by-county details, see Table 32.
- Slightly over two fifths (40.1%) of all live births in Indiana in 2005 were to unmarried parents. Significantly more black mothers (77.7%) than white mothers (35.8%) were not married to the infant’s father at the time of the birth. For details, see Table 25. For by-county details, see Table 32.