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  5. The effect of bearing and rearing a child on blood pressure: A nationally representative instrumental variable analysis of 444 611 mothers in India
 
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The effect of bearing and rearing a child on blood pressure: A nationally representative instrumental variable analysis of 444 611 mothers in India

Source
International Journal of Epidemiology
ISSN
03005771
Date Issued
2021-10-01
Author(s)
Teufel, Felix
Geldsetzer, Pascal
Sudharsanan, Nikkil
Subramanyam, Malavika A.  
Yapa, H. Manisha
De Neve, Jan Walter
Vollmer, Sebastian
Bärnighausen, Till
DOI
10.1093/ije/dyab058
Volume
50
Issue
5
Abstract
Background: At the individual level, it is well known that pregnancies have a short-term effect on a woman's cardiovascular system and blood pressure. The long-term effect of having children on maternal blood pressure, however, is unknown. We thus estimated the causal effect of having children on blood pressure among mothers in India, a country with a history of high fertility rates. Methods: We used nationally representative cross-sectional data from the 2015-16 India National Family and Health Survey (NFHS-4). The study population comprised 444 611 mothers aged 15-49 years. We used the sex of the first-born child as an instrumental variable (IV) for the total number of a woman's children. We estimated the effect of an additional child on systolic and diastolic blood pressure in IV (two-stage least squares) regressions. In additional analyses, we stratified the IV regressions by time since a mother last gave birth. Furthermore, we repeated our analyses using mothers' husbands and partners as the regression sample. Results: On average, mothers had 2.7 children [standard deviation (SD): 1.5], a systolic blood pressure of 116.4 mmHg (SD: 14.4) and diastolic blood pressure of 78.5 mmHg (SD: 9.4). One in seven mothers was hypertensive. In conventional ordinary least squares regression, each child was associated with 0.42 mmHg lower systolic [95% confidence interval (CI): -0.46 to -0.39, P < 0.001] and 0.13 mmHg lower diastolic (95% CI: -0.15 to -0.11, P < 0.001) blood pressure. In the IV regressions, each child decreased a mother's systolic blood pressure by an average of 1.00 mmHg (95% CI: -1.26 to -0.74, P < 0.001) and diastolic blood pressure by an average of 0.35 mmHg (95% CI: -0.52 to -0.17, P < 0.001). These decreases were sustained over more than a decade after childbirth, with effect sizes slightly declining as the time since last birth increased. Having children did not influence blood pressure in men. Conclusions: Bearing and rearing a child decreases blood pressure among mothers in India.
Publication link
https://academic.oup.com/ije/article-pdf/50/5/1671/41121013/dyab058.pdf
URI
https://repository.iitgn.ac.in/handle/IITG2025/25289
Subjects
Blood pressure | Child-rearing | Global health | Instrumental variable analysis | Pregnancy | Women's health
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