Smith Ken R, Mineau Geraldine P, Bean Lee L
Department of Family and Consumer Studies, 225 South 1400 East, Rm 228, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112, USA.
Soc Biol. 2002 Fall-Winter;49(3-4):185-205.
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.
我们研究了60岁之后生育对父母寿命的影响。本研究的动机源于衰老的进化理论以及预测子女给老年父母带来的社会收益和成本的理论。我们使用了犹他人口数据库,该数据库包含来自犹他家谱图书馆的大型家谱数据库。基于1860年至1899年间结婚的13987对夫妇的考克斯比例风险模型表明,子女较少以及生育较晚的女性在生育后寿命更长。随着母亲角色负担的增加,与非晚育女性相比,晚育女性在长寿方面的相对获益增加。丈夫的寿命对生育史的敏感度较低,尽管在后期结婚队列中,丈夫的影响与妻子类似。我们发现了一些基于进化原则的预测的支持证据,但我们也发现了一些证据表明共享的婚姻环境也起到了作用。