A new study of human reproduction suggests that daughters born to older mothers are more likely to remain childless.
According to researchers at McGill University in Canada, who assessed data of more than 43,000 women, a mother’s age when they give birth to their daughter will likely affect whether their daughter could have children of their own.
The new findings published in the journal Human Reproduction come after initial evidence suggesting a link was published in 2006. The study, presented at an American Society of Reproductive Medicine conference, suggested that late births cause genetic damage that is passed on. At the time, the medical community dubbed the results ‘fascinating’ - but the topic has yet to be fully understood by scientists.
However, despite proving there is a legitimate link in the recent study, the researchers have been unable to conclude why the link exists.
Some evidence suggests that women who delay having children can damage the fertility of their daughters - the older study had suggested late births cause genetic damage that is passed on to daughters.
Are older mothers passing genetic damage to their daughters’ chances of successful reproduction?
The study did not find proof of genetic damage admitting, “we had no knowledge of whether childlessness was intentional,” it did prove that “the association with childlessness was highly consistent.”




