PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Women having babies later in life more likely to live longer

Nested, case-control study confirms association between older maternal age at birth of last child and exceptional longevity

2014-06-25
(Press-News.org) CLEVELAND, Ohio (June 25, 2014)—Women who had their children later in life will be happy to learn that a new study suggests an association between older maternal age at birth of the last child and greater odds for surviving to an unusually old age. That's according to a nested case-control study published online today in Menopause, the journal of The North American Menopause Society (NAMS). In this study which used Long Life Family Study data, 311 women who survived past the oldest fifth percentile of survival (according to birth cohort-matched life tables) were identified as cases, along with 151 women who died at ages younger than the top fifth percentile of survival who were identified as controls. Looking at the cases of all 462 women, the study found a significant association for older maternal age, whereby women who had their last child beyond age 33 years had twice the odds for survival to the top fifth percentile of survival for their birth cohorts compared with women who had their last child by age 29 years. More specifically, women between the ages of 33 and 37 having their last child had an odds ratio of 2.08. The odds ratio for older women was 1.92. Several previous studies had observed a similar association. For example, an analysis of New England Centenarian Study cohort data revealed that women who gave birth to a child after age 40 years had four times greater odds for being a centenarian compared with women from the same birth cohort who had their last child at a younger age. In this latest study, it was observed that having more children (identified as three or more) tempered the association between increased maternal age and later survival. Mortality was not assessed for women who had no children. According to the authors, the fact that numerous studies have documented the same relationship between older maternal age at birth and exceptional survival provides evidence for sustained reproductive fitness, with age as a selective force for genetic variants conducive to longer life. "While this documented relationship is noteworthy, what is more meaningful is that these findings support the need to conduct additional studies that identify the various genetic influences on reproductive fitness, as these could also influence the rate of aging and a woman's susceptibility to age-related diseases," says NAMS Executive Director Margery Gass, MD. INFORMATION:The study, "Extended maternal age at birth of last child and women's longevity in the Long Life Family Study," will be published in the January 2015 print edition of Menopause. The Long Life Family Study was funded by the US National institute on Again/National Institutes of Health. Founded in 1989, The North American Menopause Society (NAMS) is North America's leading nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting the health and quality of life of all women during midlife and beyond through an understanding of menopause and healthy aging. Its multidisciplinary membership of 2,000 leaders in the field—including clinical and basic science experts from medicine, nursing, sociology, psychology, nutrition, anthropology, epidemiology, pharmacy, and education—makes NAMS uniquely qualified to serve as the definitive resource for health professionals and the public for accurate, unbiased information about menopause and healthy aging. To learn more about NAMS, visit http://www.menopause.org.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Carnegie Mellon method automatically cuts boring parts from long videos

2014-06-25
PITTSBURGH—Smartphones, GoPro cameras and Google Glass are making it easy for anyone to shoot video anywhere. But, they do not make it any easier to watch the tedious videos that can result. Carnegie Mellon University computer scientists, however, have invented a video highlighting technique that can automatically pick out the good parts. Called LiveLight, this method constantly evaluates action in the video, looking for visual novelty and ignoring repetitive or eventless sequences, to create a summary that enables a viewer to get the gist of what happened. What it produces ...

Aging with HIV and AIDS: A growing social issue

Aging with HIV and AIDS: A growing social issue
2014-06-25
TORONTO, June 25, 2014–As the first people with HIV grow old, a new study from St. Michael's Hospital questions whether the health care system and other government policies are prepared to meet their complex medical and social needs. In high-income countries such as Canada, 30 per cent of people living with HIV are 50 or older, and many are living into their 60s and 70s. In San Francisco, more than half the people with HIV are over 50. "It's a positive thing that people are aging with HIV," said Dr. Sean B. Rourke, a neuropsychologist who heads the Neurobehavioural ...

Advanced light source provides new look at skyrmions

Advanced light source provides new look at skyrmions
2014-06-25
Skyrmions, subatomic quasiparticles that could play a key role in future spintronic technologies, have been observed for the first time using x-rays. An international collaboration of researchers working at Berkeley Lab's Advanced Light Source (ALS) observed skyrmions in copper selenite (Cu2SeO3) an insulator with multiferroic properties. The results not only hold promise for ultracompact data storage and processing, but may also open up entire new areas of study in the emerging field of quantum topology. "Using resonant x-ray scattering, we were able to gather unique ...

Reorganization of crop production and trade could save China's water supply

Reorganization of crop production and trade could save Chinas water supply
2014-06-25
PRINCETON, N.J.—China's rapid socioeconomic growth continues to tax national water resources – especially in the agricultural sector – due to increasing demands for food. And, because of the country's climate and geography, irrigation is now widespread, burdening rivers and groundwater supplies. One solution to these growing problems, however, might be to reorganize the country's crop production and trade, especially in agricultural provinces such as Inner Mongolia, Heilongjiang and Hebei, according to new report issued by Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School ...

Collaborative learning -- for robots

2014-06-25
Machine learning, in which computers learn new skills by looking for patterns in training data, is the basis of most recent advances in artificial intelligence, from voice-recognition systems to self-parking cars. It's also the technique that autonomous robots typically use to build models of their environments. That type of model-building gets complicated, however, in cases in which clusters of robots work as teams. The robots may have gathered information that, collectively, would produce a good model but which, individually, is almost useless. If constraints on power, ...

Are fish near extinction?

2014-06-25
"An end to seafood by 2050?" "Fish to disappear by 2050?" These sensational media headlines were the result of a 2010 report by the United Nations Environment Program, declaring that over-fishing and pollution had nearly emptied the world's fish stocks. That scarcity portends disaster for over a billion people around the world who are dependent on fish for their main source of protein. Now, a new study by Dr. Roi Holzman and Victor China of the Department of Zoology at Tel Aviv University's George S. Wise Faculty of Life Sciences has uncovered the reason why 90% of fish ...

Fifty percent of quality improvement studies fail to change medical practices

2014-06-25
Over the last two decades, nearly half of all initiatives that review and provide feedback to clinicians on healthcare practices show little to no impact on quality of care, according to a new study by Women's College Hospital's Dr. Noah Ivers. The study, published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, found only 28 per cent of all studies showed an improvement of at least 10 per cent in quality of care over a 25-year period. "Research shows there is a gap between recommended practices and the care patients actually receive," said Dr. Noah Ivers, a family physician ...

Fracking flowback could pollute groundwater with heavy metals

Fracking flowback could pollute groundwater with heavy metals
2014-06-25
VIDEO: This video visualizes the effects of hydrofracking flowback fluid on colloid mobilization in unsaturated sand. Included are the injection of the colloids into the sand column at the beginning of... Click here for more information. ITHACA, N.Y. – The chemical makeup of wastewater generated by "hydrofracking" could cause the release of tiny particles in soils that often strongly bind heavy metals and pollutants, exacerbating the environmental risks during accidental spills, ...

LSTM Researchers demonstrate adaptive potential of hybridization in mosquito species

2014-06-25
Researchers from LSTM have exploited a natural experiment created by insecticidal pressure to determine how the most important malaria vectors - A. gambiae s.s. and A. coluzzii – respond rapidly to environmental change. Working with genome analysis specialists from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and field entomologists in Ghana, LSTM researchers sequenced the genomes of individual wild mosquitoes of each species from southern Ghana. The results, published in Nature Communications, reveal that transfer of a major insecticide resistance mutation (kdr) resulted in replacement ...

World's first magnetic hose created

Worlds first magnetic hose created
2014-06-25
The magnetic hose designed by the researchers consists of a ferromagnetic cylinder covered by a superconductor material, a surprisingly simple design given the complicated theoretical calculations and numerous lab tests it had to undergo. A 14-centimeter prototype was built, which transports the magnetic field from one extreme to the other with a efficiency of 400% in comparison to current methods used to transport these fields. Even with the efficiency of the prototype, researchers theoretically demonstrated that the magnetic hose can be even more efficient if the ferromagnetic ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Alzheimer’s Disease can hijack communication between brain and fat tissue, potentially worsening cardiovascular and metabolic health

New memristor wafer integration technology from DGIST paves the way for brain-like AI chips

Bioinspired dual-phase nanopesticide enables smart controlled release

Scientists reveal it is possible to beam up quantum signals

Asymmetric stress engineering of dense dislocations in brittle superconductors for strong vortex pinning

Shared synaptic mechanism for Alzheimer's and Parkinson’s disease unlocks new treatment possibilities

Plasma strategy boosts antibacterial efficacy of silica-based materials

High‑performance wide‑temperature zinc‑ion batteries with K+/C3N4 co‑intercalated ammonium vanadate cathodes

Prioritized Na+ adsorption‑driven cationic electrostatic repulsion enables highly reversible zinc anodes at low temperatures

Engineered membraneless organelles boost bioproduction in corynebacterium glutamicum

Study finds moral costs in over-pricing for essentials

Australian scientists uncover secrets of yellow fever

Researchers develop high-performance biochar for efficient carbon dioxide capture

Biodegradable cesium nanosalts activate anti-tumor immunity via inducing pyroptosis and intervening in metabolism

Can bamboo help solve the plastic pollution crisis?

Voting behaviour in elections strongly linked to future risk of death

Significant variations in survival times of early onset dementia by clinical subtype

Research finds higher rare risk of heart complications in children after COVID-19 infection than after vaccination

Oxford researchers develop ‘brain-free’ robots that move in sync, powered entirely by air

The science behind people who never forget a face

Study paints detailed picture of forest canopy damage caused by ‘heat dome’

New effort launched to support earlier diagnosis, treatment of aortic stenosis

Registration and Abstract Submission Open for “20 Years of iPSC Discovery: A Celebration and Vision for the Future,” 20-22 October 2026, Kyoto, Japan

Half-billion-year-old parasite still threatens shellfish

Engineering a clearer view of bone healing

Detecting heart issues in breast cancer survivors

Moffitt study finds promising first evidence of targeted therapy for NRAS-mutant melanoma

Lay intuition as effective at jailbreaking AI chatbots as technical methods

USC researchers use AI to uncover genetic blueprint of the brain’s largest communication bridge

Tiny swarms, big impact: Researchers engineering adaptive magnetic systems for medicine, energy and environment

[Press-News.org] Women having babies later in life more likely to live longer
Nested, case-control study confirms association between older maternal age at birth of last child and exceptional longevity