Only 22% of Ukrainian homes have kids, but almost half of western tap water has E. coli
The State Statistics Service dropped a massive wartime demographic report with UNICEF, and the vibe is basically: fewer kids, less domestic violence, and a surprising amount of tap water bacteria.
Let's talk numbers. The share of households with children has crashed to just 22% (down from 31% back in 2012). The fertility rate is now at a tiny 1.13. It turns out 59% of homes have been directly hit by the war—from economic shocks to displacement, damage, and loss.
But then the report takes a wild turn into the plumbing. Nearly a quarter of Ukrainian tap water contains E. coli. If that sounds bad, wait till you see the regional breakdown: in western Ukraine, almost 45% of households have bacteria in their drinking water, while the war-torn east sits at just 3%. Apparently, the local infrastructure in the west is playing on hard mode.
On the bright side, we are hitting children less. Violent discipline at home has plummeted from 61% to 32% over the last decade. Perhaps everyone is just too exhausted to scream, or maybe the new generation of parents is actually doing something right.
It seems the classic parenting advice of drinking water to calm down is currently a double-edged sword.
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