Unveiled: the hospitals where almost nine out of ten babies are born from non-British mothers

Unveiled: the hospitals where almost nine out of ten babies are born from non-British mothers

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British mothers have now been surpassed by mother born abroad on almost one in seven maternity units, according to analysis.

In the Northwick Park Hospital, in Harrow Borough, London, there was a stunning 84.2 percent of living births in 2023 as non-British mothers.

Behind Northwick Park was the University Hospital of Newham (77.1 percent) Hillingdon Hospital (72.1 percent) and North Middlesex Hospital (71.2 percent).

Almost a third of all births in England and Wales are now for mothers born abroad, says the Office for National Statistics (us).

In 2003, before immigration to all time, that figure was just shy for a fifth.

India is the most common country of origin for non-drilling mothers, just before Pakistan, Romania, Nigeria and Poland.

When the us figures are demolished by the hospital, 27 different locations register more than 50 percent.

This includes St Mary’s, a NHS hospital in Manchester that delivers more babies than anywhere else in the country.

Nine out of ten hospitals with the highest non-British mother are births in London.

The city hospital of Birmingham (64.5 percent) in Winson Green is in eighth place.

The other end of the spectrum is also located, with three of the five lowest rates in Wales.

Royal Glamorgan in Llantrisant (5.7 percent) is the last, according to the breakdown of MailOnline of all 269 facilities.

Exact figures are not delivered for dozens of locations with too few births to analyze.

A spokesperson for ours told MailOnline: ‘Almost a third of babies born in 2023 in England and Wales was for non-British women, a slight increase in the percentage in 2022.

‘This is a continuation of the long-term trend of the percentage of living births to non-drilling mothers who generally increase.

“Although our birth data shows us the country of birth of the parents, it does not give us a picture of the ethnicity or migration history of the family, and it is worth noting that not all women who are born outside the UK will be recent immigrants.”

India remained the most common birth country for non-boarding mothers (3.6 percent of all living births) and fathers (3.9 percent) in England and Wales last year.

Pakistan became second again.

For the first time in 2023, Ghana entered the top 10 of the most common countries for non-drill mothers, in ninth place with 0.6 percent of living births.

But Germany fell out of the top 10, because it was there since our records started for this measure in 2003.

Albania was arranged by number seven, by the eighth in 2022, after he had introduced the top 10 for the first time in 2021.

Afghanistan was at number eight and fell from seventh place in 2022.

Professor Sarah Harper, an expert in the field of population and migration at the University of Oxford, told MailOnline: ‘Non-Born mothers have always had the tendency to have a higher total fertility percentage than in the UK.

“This is particularly the case with mothers born in South Asia and since Brexit the VK has taken more immigrants from South Asia and less from EU countries.”

There were only 591,072 live births in England and Wales in 2023, the lowest number since 1977 (569,259).

This number also represented a decrease of 14,407 compared to the year before.

Professor Harper said that this trend amounts to economic factors such as affordability, but also a change in attitude to people who want less or children.

The total fertility percentage (TFR) in England and Wales fell to 1.44 children per woman, the lowest value since the records started in 1938.

Free wipe birth rates have caused the Doomsday warnings about the collapse of the population, which demographers believe it will destroy Western economies.

If the downward spiral continues, landing can make it work with too few younger people, pay taxes and take care of the elderly.

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