行业英语 学英语,练听力,上听力课堂! 注册 登录
> 行业英语 > 金融英语 > 金融时报原文阅读 >  第150篇

父母的年龄影响孩子的健康?

所属教程:金融时报原文阅读

浏览:

2020年03月14日

手机版
扫描二维码方便学习和分享

父母的年龄影响孩子的健康?

著名的摇滚歌星Mick Jagger在73岁高龄时迎来了他的第八个孩子,可科学研究表明,父亲生育的年龄与孩子的健康之间存在着密不可分的联系。

测试中可能遇到的词汇和知识:

fertility生育力[fə'tɪlɪtɪ]

autism spectrum disorder自闭症谱系障碍

schizophrenia精神分裂症

hyperactivity极度活跃[,haɪpəræk'tɪvəti]

precursor先驱,前导[prɪ'kɜːsə]

psychiatric精神病学的[,saɪkɪ'ætrɪk]

immaterial无形的[ɪmə'tɪərɪəl]

procreate生育(子女);产生['prəʊkrɪeɪt]

Why paternal age matters to children's health (951 words)

By Anjana Ahuja

Sir Mick Jagger embodies what one writer has called paleo-fatherhood, or the trend of becoming a dad in later life. He was 73 when Deveraux, his eighth child, was born to his 29-year-old partner, ballerina Melanie Hamrick.

The Rolling Stone is an extreme example but there has been a shift to older parenthood in recent decades. In 2015, first-time dads in the UK were 33 and first-time mothers were 30, on average four years older than was the case 40 years ago.

Discussion has tended to focus on women's declining fertility, but paternal age seems to matter too.

There is fairly robust evidence that fathers who conceive in their forties or older have children who run two to three times the usual risk of developing an autism spectrum disorder and schizophrenia. Other studies have implicated advanced paternal age (usually defined as over 40, though different studies use different thresholds) in low academic achievement. This matters: in 2015, 15 per cent of new fathers in the UK were aged 40 or over.

A paper out this month suggests that the children of both a typically young and old fathers are more likely to show unusual patterns of social development, and to end up more socially challenged than their peers.

The reasons for this are unclear but the findings highlight the emerging association between delayed fatherhood and higher health risks for offspring.

The big question is whether this association stems from age-related genetic changes in sperm, or whether the men who become fathers later in life already have social difficulties that delay conception, and which then get passed on to the next generation.

The new research was led by Dr Magdalena Janecka, from the Seaver Autism Center for Research and Treatment, at the Mount Sinai Hospital in New York. It looked at data collected on 15,000 pairs of twins between the ages of four and 16, including social development, conduct with peers, and hyperactivity, and ruled out those already diagnosed with autism.

It found that children born to fathers aged either under 25 or over 51 were more socially skilled than their peers in their early development. By adolescence, however, the same children had fallen behind socially.

Their findings, published this month in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, were independent of the mother's age.

Dr Janecka concludes that “social skills are a key domain affected by paternal age … in extreme cases, these effects may contribute to clinical disorders”.

The researchers theorise that paternal age influences how a child's brain matures, with further study possibly shedding light on how autism and schizophrenia develop.

Scientists suggest that random genetic mutations during sperm production might explain the association. The precursors to sperm cells are continually dividing, with each division representing the opportunity for a genetic typo, or copying mistake.

The rate of these so-called de novo mutations has been estimated to double roughly every 16 years, meaning older men shoulder many more mutations than younger men.

Others have suggested that the rate of such mutations is simply not high enough to account fully for the higher risk of psychiatric illness in the children of older fathers.

A 2016 paper in Nature by scientists from the Queensland Brain Institute concluded that “genetic risk factors shared by older fathers and their offspring are a credible alternative explanation” to the mutated sperm theory.

In other words, men who are at greater risk of psychiatric illness tend to become fathers later in life — and their kids simply inherit that greater risk.

If this is the case, the biological clock does not tick as urgently for men as for women. But the science is by no means settled, partly because there are so many other factors aside from parental age — such as childhood neglect and drug use — that influence mental health.

One major study, which supports the link between paternal age, psychiatric risk and academic outcome, involved combing the data of 2.6m Swedes. It was able to compare siblings born to the same father. If the siblings were simply inheriting risk, paternal age would be immaterial. In fact, as paternal age rises, so does the risk of psychiatric illness and lower school grades.

“It would make sense that the effect lies in the integrity of the sperm line,” says Professor Frances Happé, an autism expert at the Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, and a co-author of the JAACAP paper.

Men, she adds, make sperm throughout life. The production process may be vulnerable to environmental effects as well as random mutations.

Professor Adam Balen, chair of the British Fertility Society, says the study “doesn't give a definitive answer about the biological or social causes of autism in the children of older men”.

He adds: “As people in more developed economies are choosing to have children later in life, we need to understand what that might mean for the overall health and wellbeing of future generations.”

Prof Happé also warns that, since it is impossible to predict which men are affected, couples should not plan families around this research.

In the meantime, silver-haired dads are on the rise, thanks to a collision of social trends. Many men and women want to taste career success — and the financial stability that accompanies it — before procreating. Relatively high divorce rates are producing second broods, and reproductive science is extending the age limits to parenting that were previously set by nature. Celebrity fathers are removing the stigma of late parenthood: Sir Paul McCartney and Clint Eastwood became sixty something dads.

There might even be advantages amid the (hypothetical) genetic gloom: work might not compete as much; finances might be less strained.

Perhaps Sir Mick had thought it through, after all.

1.What is the average age of first-time dads in UK in 2013?

A.30

B.33

C.43

D.50

答案(1)

2.What will not be affected by advanced paternal age?

A.Social development

B.Health situation

C.Weight and height

D.Academic achievement

答案(2)

3.The research led by Dr Magdalena Janecka are mainly related to what?

A.Father's age

B.Mother's age

C.Parental education levels

D.Parental cares

答案(3)

4.What could explain the association between father's age and children's health?

A.Environmental problems related to fathers' heath

B.Genetic mutations during sperm production

C.Quality of male sperm production

D.Aging process of male's organs

答案(4)

(1)答案:B.33

解释:据报道2013年英国男性第一次成为父亲的平均年龄是33岁,而女性则是30岁。

(2)答案:C.Weight and height

解释:研究结果表明,孩子的健康状况、在学校的课业表现和社会关系都多多少少与父母的生育年龄有联系。

(3)答案:D.Parental cares

解释:由Magdalena Janecka博士所领导的研究主要揭露了父亲的年龄和孩子的社会活动状况之间的关系,而母亲年龄的影响被忽略不计。

(4)答案:B.Genetic mutations during sperm production

解释:专家指出,精子的基因变异对于解释父亲年龄和孩子健康之间存在的联系十分重要,对男性而言,每16年这种变异可能性就会翻倍。

用户搜索

疯狂英语 英语语法 新概念英语 走遍美国 四级听力 英语音标 英语入门 发音 美语 四级 新东方 七年级 赖世雄 zero是什么意思上海市沪亭苑英语学习交流群

网站推荐

英语翻译英语应急口语8000句听歌学英语英语学习方法

  • 频道推荐
  • |
  • 全站推荐
  • 推荐下载
  • 网站推荐