Markle’s ‘geriatric’ pregnancy appears to be the new normal
Birth rates are falling for women in their 20s and climbing for those in their 30s and 40s
When Queen Elizabeth II was 37, she gave birth to her fourth child.
The queen’s 37-year-old granddaughter-in-law, Meghan Markle, announced this week that she’s pregnant with her first.
What a difference two generations make.
The Duchess of Sussex is the latest celebrity poster woman for two clashing realities. One is that the ability to bear children declines so rapidly that age 35 is the threshold for “advanced maternal age.” At that point, both woman and baby face significantly higher risks of complications.
But the other reality is that women are delaying child-bearing anyway.
The latest federal data showing that women are having fewer babies and at later ages was released this week. Over the past decade, women in rural areas and small towns have bolstered this trend, although it is most pronounced in metropolitan counties.
At the same time, birth rates have been falling for women in their 20s and climbing for women in their 30s and 40s. Last year, 42 per cent of the nation’s 3.8 million births were to women in their
30s, according to federal data.
This shift is seen in all Western countries. It is not driven by some environmental or political catastrophe like in “The Handmaid’s Tale.” Mostly, it’s because women can use birth control and legal abortion to postpone motherhood in favour of education and careers.
Still, the shift has inspired strident reactions. A lot of infertility specialists think women choose to ignore, or don’t believe, that by age 35 they have only 3 per cent of the eggs they were born with, and the supply and genetic quality go downhill fast after that. The experts blame the media for feeding wilful ignorance by glorifying women like the duchess.
“The media portrayal of a youthful but older woman, able to schedule her reproductive needs and balance family and job, has fuelled the myth that
‘you can have it all,’ rarely characterizing the perils inherent to advanced-age reproduction,” Mark V. Sauer, chief of reproductive endocrinology at Columbia University Medical Center, wrote in the journal Fertility and Sterility.
Women, meanwhile, rankle at medical terminology that they feel shames them for having biological clocks.
Laura Kenney, writing in Self magazine, decried the “litany of quasi-ageist terms knocked-up over-35s are blasted with: There was ‘advanced maternal age,’ ‘geriatric pregnancy,’ and the fact that I was considered ‘highrisk.’ ”
How much of a dive does fertility take after 35? That can be hard to tease out, since married couples’ friskiness also tends to decrease with age. A classic French study got around this by following women who were inseminated up to 12 times because their husbands were sterile. A little more than half of the women older than 35 got pregnant, compared with three-quarters of those younger than 31.
For women who use in vitro fertilization, age is still an issue. The chance of a baby after one IVF cycle was 42 per cent before age 35, compared with 32 per cent for ages 35 to 37, and 22 per cent for ages 38 to 40, according to fertility clinic data.
The perils of child-bearing, including miscarriage, stillbirth and even maternal death, also increase after 35.
Then again, the risks are small compared with the chances of success, especially if the woman is in good health, not obese, hypertensive, diabetic or a smoker.
“In my opinion, the health of the woman is the most important factor,” said Zaher Merhi, a reproductive endocrinologist at New Hope Fertility Center in New York City.
Now that older mothers have become normal, insensitive terminology is fading, he and other experts say.
“The word geriatric inherently has the connotation of disease,” Merhi said. “If she’s 36 and healthy, her pregnancy is not geriatric.”
University of Pennsylvania infertility specialist Christos Coutifaris, who is the immediate past president of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, said, “Geriatric puts on a label that is both inappropriate and inaccurate.”
The challenge is finding a balance, said Thomas Jefferson University psychologist Andrea M. Braverman, who counsels infertile couples.
“On one hand, we don’t want to pathologize delayed child-bearing,” she said. “On the other hand, we don’t want to pretend women can do whatever they want whenever they want.”
That goes even for royals. Markle, who married Prince Harry in May, is due in the spring.