Women who delay having children enter a ‘risk zone’ of
problems in their early thirties, researchers say – much earlier than was
previously thought.
The risk of problems such as premature and stillbirth rises
by as much as 20 per cent for women aged between 30 and 34, compared with those
having babies in their late twenties.
First-time mothers have previously been told they are at
high risk above the age of 35, but more and more women are putting off having
children until their thirties.
Professor Ulla Waldenström, who led the study, said: ‘To our
surprise we found an absolute increase in risk for negative effects on
pregnancy outcomes in the age group 30-34.
These are independent of the effects of smoking and being
overweight, which, when combined, lead to an even greater risk.’
In England and Wales the average age at first birth was 27.9
years in 2011 – up 1.3 years in a decade – and the average age of all mothers
was almost 30.
Some of the country’s leading obstetricians and fertility
specialists have warned that women who put off having children until their
thirties are ‘defying nature’ and may not become mothers at all because of
increased rates of risk and infertility.
Professor Waldenström’s team, from the Karolinska Institute
in Stockholm and the University of Bergen looked at data from around one
million first-time mothers in Sweden and Norway.
They compared the results of pregnancy in first-time mothers
over the age of 30 with those aged 25 to 29.
The results showed that for women in their early thirties,
there was a one-fifth higher risk of giving birth very prematurely – during
weeks 22 to 31 of pregnancy – or having a stillbirth. There was also a higher
risk that the unborn baby’s growth would be restricted and that the baby would
die.
First-time mothers in this age group were not previously
seen as at risk.
Smoking and being overweight pushed up the risks of pre-term
birth, stillbirth and neonatal mortality to the same level as that for women
aged 35-39, said the report in the scientific journal Obstetrics and
Gynecology.
Professor Waldenström said: ‘For women individually, the
risk is small, but for society at large there will be a significant number of
“unnecessary” complications with so many women having children just after 30.
‘It would therefore be advisable to inform both women and
men, even at schools, of how important age is to child birth.’
‘Biologically the best time is probably 20 to 30,’ she
added.
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