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  • Title: Pregnancy wastage and age of mother among the Amish.
    Author: Resseguie LJ.
    Journal: Hum Biol; 1974 Dec; 46(4):633-9. PubMed ID: 4475022.
    Abstract:
    Reports of approximately 7500 pregnancies in reproductive histories collected by Colette Wiffler through personal interviews with Old Order Amish families of Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, and Wisconsin during the 1968 through 1973 period were analyzed to test a prediction: a society in which healthy women generally want large numbers of children and do not marry unusually uoung should exhibit a slower rate of increase in fetal death ratios with age of mother than the general US population. In this study, fetal deaths occurring after 7 months of gestation were called stillbirths; those occurring between 6 weeks and 7 months were termed miscarriages. Neonatal deaths occurred within the 1st week following live birth. All loss ratios were calculated as the number of the specified type of pregnancy loss/1000 pregnancies which lasted at least 7 months. The minimum miscarriage and stillbirth ratios each occurred in the early 30s, but the ratios were not statistically different from those for mothers in their early 20s. The interpretation of the observation is complicated by substantial reductions in pregnancy wastage experienced by the general population over the long span of time (1898 through 1972) covered by the present data. For the US both late fetal death ratios and neonatal death rates specific for the age of the mother reach their minimum in the early 20s. While most available data provide information about late fetal death only, the study of pregnancies in New York's Health Insurance Plan revealed markedly higher fetal death ratios for mothers in the early 30s than for mothers in their 20s both for gestations of 12-19 weeks and for those of less than 12 weeks. Thus, the Amish fetal deaths differ from the general US pattern similarly for miscarriages and for the less numerous stillbirths. These results are compatible with the prediction under test but conflict with the expectations of the traditional idea that women in their early 20s have their ability to carry pregnancies to live birth impaired by age. The findings suggest that any increase in risk of fetal death caused by increasing age of an individual mother must be unimportant before age 35. It appears that women who decide to postpone their pregnancies until their late 20s or early 30s are probably not materially increasing the risk of fetal death. The same appears to be the case for early infant mortality.
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