Deccan Chronicle

Older dads’ kids run higher health risk

To date, most research on age of parents focused on mothers

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Paris, Nov. 1: Newborns of fathers 45 and older are more likely to be underweigh­t or wind up in intensive care, researcher­s reported on Thursday, adding to the list of problems associated with older dads.

For fathers 55 and up, infants tended to score worse in a standardis­ed test used to assess the baby's health immediatel­y after birth.

Even more startling -- and harder to explain -- was a heightened risk for women carrying the child of a man 55 and older of diabetes arising during pregnancy, according to a study published in the medical journal BMJ.

All these conclusion­s, the researcher­s cautioned, are based on an analysis of medical records rather than a controlled experiment, which means no firm conclusion­s about cause-andeffect can be drawn. The overall risk of such outcomes also remained low, they added.

But the findings held true even after other factors that might skew the results -age of the mother, maternal smoking, level of education -- were taken into account, they said.

“A significan­t number of these negative birth outcomes were estimated to be prevented if older fathers had elected to have children before the age of 45,” the scientists concluded.

“The risk associated with advanced paternal age should be included in discussion­s regarding family planning and reproducti­ve counsellin­g.” The average age of fatherhood has been steadily rising in wealthy nations, as has the percentage of fathers above 45 or 55.

In the United States, the number of births to men 40 and older has almost doubled to nine percent over the last 40 years. For men over 50, the percentage has gone up from 0.5 to nearly one.

Similar trends are found in western Europe. In England, for example, fathers over 35 accounted for 40 percent of all births in 2003, compared with 25 percent in 1993.

To date, most research on the link between the age of parents and health outcomes in children has focused on older mothers.

But recent studies suggest that being a father later in life may also be associated with higher risks in offspring of autism, genetic abnormalit­ies and mental problems.

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