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Early age at first birth, but not parity, is associated with poor physical performance in older age. Presented by Catherine M. Pirkle, on behalf of Ana-Carolina Patricio de Albuqueque Sousa, Beatriz Alvarado, Maria-Victoria Zunzunegui and the IMIAS research team.
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Early age at first birth, but not parity, is associated with poor physical performance in older age Presented by Catherine M. Pirkle, on behalf of Ana-Carolina Patricio de Albuqueque Sousa, Beatriz Alvarado, Maria-Victoria Zunzunegui and the IMIAS research team
Introduction: Gender gap in aging • Women- Greater burden of physical decline and disability with advancing age • Gender gap varies by country • Greatest in countries with highest levels of inequity • Decline/disability greatest among the least educated & most impoverished individuals
Explanations for the gender gap • Greater physiological dysregulation in the post-menopausal period? • Greater risk of chronic disease? • Less educational and professional opportunities? • More hardships (hunger, violence, etc.)?
Role of reproductive history less explored • Women from low-income countries and impoverished backgrounds tend to: • Start childbearing earlier • Have more children • Face more risks during childbirth • Receive less care for childbirth-related health problems (e.g. pelvic floor disorders)
Pregnancy can fundamentally alter a woman’s physiology • Interferes with bone mineral density (osteoporosis) • Alters long-term glucose homeostasis (diabetes, coronary heart disease) • Drains nutritional reserves (anaemia) • Results in injury to pelvic region (fistula, prolapse) • Changes/risks most profound in young mothers and mothers of many children
Childbearing shapes life opportunities Early childbearing and elevated parity can • Lower educational attainment • Limit professional opportunities • Heighten familial and personal stress • Increase social status • Be a source of pride and distinction • Serve as an escape route from a stressful family environment
Objectives & Hypotheses Obj.: Assess the link between reproductive history -early age at first birth and multiparity- and physical function in older age. Hyp. 1: Women who gave birth as teenagers and women who have had numerous children will have poorerphysical function in older age. Hyp. 2: The relationship between early age at first birth and parity with physical function will be more profound in Latin America than the Canadian and European sites.
Study Measures • Exposures • Early age at first birth (≤18 years of age) • Parity (continuous, ≥3 births) • Outcome • SPPB (continuous, score ≤8) • Covariates • Age & education • Chronic diseases (at 65-74 years): osteoporosis, diabetes, chronic lung disease, high blood pressure, stroke, coronary heart disease, arthritis, & cancer
Statistics • Measures of frequency (mean, SD, etc.) • Logistic regression • Poor physical function (SPPB ≤8) • General linear model • SPPB score
Results: Exposures Age at first Birth Lifetime births 25 5.4 22 2.4
Age at first birth & parity with poor physical function (SPPB ≤8) * * • Early age at first birth significantly associated w/ poor physical function, even after controlling for parity. • Much of the association lost when adjusting for chronic conditions • Parity (3+ children) is not associated with poor physical function *P-value < 0.05
Early age at 1st birth significantly associated with SPPB (cont. measure) Adjusted for site, age, education, parity) Also adjusted for chronic diseases
Association varies by study site Canada and Albania- early age at first birth significantly associated with lower SPPB Latin America- no difference in SPPB scores
Summary of Results • Early age at 1st birth significantly associated with poor physical function in older age • Mediated at least in part by chronic diseases • No association between parity and physical function • Parity likely a consequence of early age at 1st birth • Association heterogeneous across study sites • Strongest in Canada and Albania
Implications Identification of a high risk group • May benefit from interventions throughout the life-course and in old age (e.g. better treatments & follow-up of chronic disease, greater physical activity, social support) Importance of access to contraception for young women who do not want to have children
Acknowledgements • Funding for this research was provided by the Canadian Institutes for Health Research • We thank all the participants of for their time and support of this study • We greatly appreciate the comments and feedback we received from Alban Ylli and Jack Guralnik