Teen Dads Tied To Babies' Health Risks
Study: Babies Born To Teen Fathers More Likely To Have Lower Birth Weight, Higher Death Rate
-
(CBS/AP)
That news comes from a study posted online in Human Reproduction. It's one of few studies to focus on teenage fathers.
The study included data on 2.8 million U.S. babies born from 1995 to 2000 to women in their 20s. The researchers focused on women in their 20s because they're less likely than teen girls to have risky births.
Most of the babies were fathered by men in their 20s or 30s. But more than 28,000 babies were fathered by men younger than 20.
Compared with babies fathered by men in their 20s, babies fathered by teens were more likely to have these risks:
- Preterm birth
- Low birth weight
- Small size for their gestational age
- Less healthy at birth
- Higher death rate from birth through their first birthday
The researchers aren't blaming teenage fathers for those problems. The data don't reveal everything about the parents' health, class, lifestyle, and other factors.
But biology might play a role, according to the researchers.
Men younger than 25 are more likely than older men to have immature sperm, which "might be associated with an increased risk of adverse birth outcomes," write Xi-Kuan Chen, MD, PhD, and colleagues. Chen works in the obstetrics and gynecology department at Canada's University of Ottawa.
By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Louise Chang
©2008 WebMD, Inc. All rights reserved.
- Gimme a break!!! So when are we men supposed to have kids?
We are not supposed to do it when we are getting older and now we are not supposed to do it when we are young.
After all the studies have been done they''ll come up with some crazy stuff like the best time for men to have kids is when they are 26 years, two months, one week and 17 hours old! - Reply to this comment
- How about some other findings that everyone knows. Teen fathers tend to be deadbeats who don''t hang around with their booty, leaving the kids to grow up in less than idea welfare circumstances. Maybe, just maybe, perhaps, that has something to do with a higher death rate until their first birthday.
- Reply to this comment
International recording artist Shakira on love, career and more.




