Does Delayed Fertility Explain the Rise in Comorbidities Among the Birthing Population?

J Womens Health (Larchmt)

Department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.

Published: June 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzes the relationship between advanced maternal age (AMA) and the rise of preexisting health conditions in pregnant individuals by reviewing data from California births between 1991 and 2012.
  • While AMA (ages 35 and older) saw a nearly 70% increase, the study found that while the prevalence of certain health issues (like autoimmune conditions, chronic hypertension, and diabetes) increased, AMA accounted for only a small percentage of these increases.
  • The findings suggest that while older maternal age is linked to higher rates of some health conditions, it does not significantly explain the overall rise in these conditions during childbirth.

Article Abstract

The increasing prevalence of preexisting health conditions among pregnant people is often attributed to the concurrent rise in maternal age. However, the link between advanced maternal age (AMA) and increases in chronic conditions among the birthing population has not been systematically documented at the population level. This retrospective population-based cohort study was based on linked hospitalization discharge and birth certificate data for live birth deliveries in California from 1991 to 2012. Decomposition techniques evaluated whether changes in the prevalence of selected preexisting health conditions during delivery (autoimmune conditions, chronic hypertension, cardiac disease, diabetes, and renal disease) were explained by population-level increases in maternal age. Analyses further adjusted for maternal education, plurality, insurance status, and availability of paternal information on the birth certificate. Between 1991 and 2012, there were more than 11.5 million live birth deliveries in California. AMA (≥35 years) increased nearly 70% over this period. The prevalence of autoimmune conditions, chronic hypertension, diabetes, and renal disease rose among the birthing population, while cardiac disease declined. The prevalence of all conditions was higher for AMA, but changes in maternal age accounted for only 5.3%, 8.4%, 13.9%, and 0.4%, of the increase in autoimmune conditions, chronic hypertension, diabetes, and renal disease, respectively. While AMA was associated with higher rates of preexisting health conditions, it contributed little to the increase in autoimmune conditions, chronic hypertension, and diabetes and nothing to the rise in renal disease during childbirth.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/jwh.2022.0370DOI Listing

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