The current ‘dramatically’ high paternal ages at childbirth are not unprecedented

Author:

Willführ Kai P12ORCID,Klüsener Sebastian345ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Social Sciences, School of Educational and Social Sciences, Carl von Ossietzky University , Oldenburg, Germany

2. Center for Economic Demography, Department of Economic History, Lund University , Sweden

3. Ageing, Mortality and Population Dynamics, Federal Institute for Population Research (BiB) , Wiesbaden, Germany

4. Institute of Sociology and Social Psychology (ISS), University of Cologne , Cologne, Germany

5. Centre for Demographic Research, Vytautas Magnus University , Kaunas, Lithuania

Abstract

Abstract There is strong individual-level evidence that late fatherhood is related to a wide range of health disorders and conditions in offspring. Over the last decades, mean paternal ages at childbirth have risen drastically. This has alarmed researchers from a wide range of fields. However, existing studies have an important shortcoming in that they lack a long-term perspective. This article is a step change in providing such a long-term perspective. We unveil that in many countries the current mean paternal ages at childbirth and proportions of fathers of advanced age at childbirth are not unprecedented. Taking the detected U-shaped trend pattern into account, we discuss individual- and population-level implications of the recent increases in paternal ages at childbirth and highlight important knowledge gaps. At the individual level, some of the biological mechanisms that are responsible for the paternal age-related health risk might, at least to some degree, be counterbalanced by various social factors. Further, how these individual-level effects are linked to population health and human cognitive development might be influenced by various factors, including technical advances and regulations in prenatal diagnostics.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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