Childbearing history and late-life mortality: The Dubbo study of Australian elderly

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Abstract

Objective: to examine the association of parity with mortality in later life. Design: a longitudinal, community-based study. Setting: semi-rural town of Dubbo, NSW, Australia.Subjects: a total of 1,571 women and 1,233 men 60 years and older first examined in 1988-89.Outcome measures: all-cause and cause-specific mortality rates analysed over 16-year follow-up. Hazard ratios obtained from proportional hazards models employing conventional predictors, potential confounders and measure of parity. Results: increasing parity in women was weakly associated with overweight, diabetes and hypertension. All-cause mortality fell progressively with increasing parity in women (hazard ratio and 95% confidence intervals): childless, 1.00; 1 child, 1.03 (0.75-1.43); 2 children, 0.83 (0.61-1.11); 3 children, 0.80 (0.60-1.08); 4 children, 0.91 (0.66-1.25); 5 children, 0.70 (0.49-1.01); 6+ children, 0.60 (0.43-0.85) (trend for parity P < 0.002). This result was similar whether or not hypertension, diabetes and overweight were included in multivariate models adjusting for social variables and other confounders. The reduction in all-cause mortality was accompanied by a parallel reduction in deaths from cancer and respiratory conditions, while coronary heart disease mortality increased 60-111% in all parous women.Conclusion: there was increased all-cause mortality in later life in childless women, accompanied by reduced mortality as parity increased. Underlying mechanisms are unclear but findings may have public health importance. © The Author 2012. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. All rights reserved.

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Simons, L. A., Simons, J., Friedlander, Y., & Mccallum, J. (2012). Childbearing history and late-life mortality: The Dubbo study of Australian elderly. Age and Ageing, 41(4), 523–528. https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afs016

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