Fertility and post-reproductive longevity

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Publication Type Journal Article
School or College College of Social & Behavioral Science
Department Family & Consumer Studies
Creator Smith, Ken R.
Other Author Mineau, Geraldine P.; Bean, Lee L.
Title Fertility and post-reproductive longevity
Date 2002
Description We examine the effects of reproduction on longevity among mothers and fathers after age 60. This study is motivated by evolutionary theories of aging and theories predicting social benefits and costs of children to older parents. We use the Utah Population Database, that includes a large genealogical database from the Utah Family History Library. Cox proportional hazard models based on 13,987 couples married between 1860-1899 indicate that women with fewer children as well as those bearing children late in life live longer post-reproductive lives. As the burdens of motherhood increase, the relative gains in longevity of late fertile women increase compared to their non-late fertile counterparts. Husbands' longevity is less sensitive to reproductive history, although husbands have effects that are similar to those of their wives during the latter marriage cohort. We find some support for predictions based on evolutionary principles, but we also find evidence that implicates a role for shared marital environments.
Type Text
Publisher Society for the Study of Social Biology (SSSB)
Volume 49
Issue 3
First Page 185
Last Page 205
Subject Fertility; Post-reproductiivity; Longevity
Subject LCSH Fertility; Older people; Longevity
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Smith, K. R., Mineau, G. P., Bean, L. L., (2002). Fertility and post-reproductive longevity. Social Biology, 49(3),185-205.
Rights Management (c) Society for the study of Social Biology (SSSB)
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 2,186,840 Bytes
Identifier ir-main,1705
ARK ark:/87278/s62j6w7t
Setname ir_uspace
ID 704999
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s62j6w7t
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