Objectives:
The parent-child relationship is critical for human development, yet
little is known about its association with offsprings’ reproductive
health outside the context of abuse and neglect. We investigated whether
childhood experiences of poor-quality parenting (characterized as decreased
parental care and increased parental overprotection) are associated with
women’s reproductive timing and lifespan.
Study design:
Observational study of 2,383 women aged 55–89 years in 2007
from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA). Multinomial logistic
regression models were estimated.
Main outcome measures:
Self-reported ages at menarche and menopause and duration of
reproductive lifespan.
Results:
Increasing maternal and paternal overprotection were associated with
later menarche (≥16 years) after adjustment for age and childhood
socioeconomic position (relative risk ratio (RRR) 1.11, 95% CI
1.02–1.21 and 1.11, 95% CI 1.01–1.21, respectively, per unit
increase in the predictor).Increasing parental overprotection and decreasing
paternal care were associated with earlier menarche (≤10 years).
However, these associations were marginally non-significant. Maternal and
paternal overprotection were also inversely associated with age at natural
menopause after adjustment for age, childhood socioeconomic position and age
at menarche (p value for linear trend=0.041 and 0.004, respectively).
Further, increasing paternal overprotection was associated with a shorter
reproductive lifespan (≤33 years) (RRR 1.09 (1.01–1.18), per
unit increase in the predictor) after adjustment for age and childhood
socioeconomic position. Adjustment for additional childhood and adult
factors did not explain these associations.
Conclusions:
Women who experienced poor-quality parenting in childhood, especially
increased levels of parental overprotection, might be at increased risk of
an unfavourable reproductive health profile that is characterized by late or
early menarche, premature menopause and a shorter reproductive lifespan.