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When reading this article on BBC News I was surprised by the following claim:

Just compare now to what happened 100 years ago or so. Then, many women died in their 40s because of having to give birth many times. Lots of people died young.

This seems to imply that giving birth takes a toll on the body that is cumulative, eventually causing death in a significant number of women. This seems unlikely to me.

It is possible that the wording is poor, and it actually means that each birth carried a significant risk of death for the mother, and that multiplying this risk-per-birth by a large number of births per woman meant that many women died in childbirth. Even then, I find it unlikely that giving birth accounted for a significant proportion of female deaths; significant enough that it apparently is worth being the only mention in the article as to why people used to die younger.

So:

  1. Was giving birth a significant factor in causing death a century (or more) ago?
  2. Was the risk of dying from childbirth cumulative (i.e. increasing with each birth)?
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    A strict reading of the claim doesn't even say that these women died during childbirth, only that they died during their 40s due to having given birth so often; in other words, the pregnancies and births caused long-time damage that caused them to die earlier. I have never heard such a claim before though. Oct 8, 2015 at 12:45
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    The BBC News claim is probably due to a misunderstanding of life expectancy. I would suspect life expectancy was in the 40s, because many women died in their 20s and 30s giving birth. Averaging with women dying in their 60s, 70s, 80s, without giving birth, leads to a life expectancy in the 40s.
    – gerrit
    Oct 8, 2015 at 12:57
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    @Suma: I'm speculating, but I read the intended statement as "Women had a life expectancy in their 40s, because they attempted to have more children than modern women, and each child-birth was riskier than today, so more of them died younger." i.e. poorly worded or poorly quoted.
    – Oddthinking
    Oct 8, 2015 at 13:41
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    Why is everyone talking about long-term damage/cumulative toll? The professor never said anything about that in the article. Below someone stated the chance of death during childbirth was ~4%. If you (planned on) having 10 children, that means your chances of dying during childbirth were 1-0.96^10 ≈ 1 in 3. That's what she meant. Oct 8, 2015 at 15:45
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    It's still a major cause of death... In developing countries and countries with bad health-care, complications due to pregnancies and births, remain the number one cause of death for women of child-baring age. In addition, comes all the non-lethal - but perhaps life-shortening - complications caused by pregnancies/birth - like some forms of diabetes, incontinence, hypertension, and so forth. Oct 9, 2015 at 10:38

1 Answer 1

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Has maternal mortality due to child birth dropped in England over the past 100 years?

Yes. Tremendously.

The 2006 paper, British maternal mortality in the 19th and early 20th centuries examines this.

Figure 1 illustrates the incredible improvement, just up to 1970 alone.

Annual death rate per 1000 total births from maternal mortality in England and Wales (1850-1970)

Annual death rate per 1000 total births from maternal mortality in England and Wales (1850-1970)

We can see from the chart that, around 100 years ago, the death rate was 40 per 1000, or a 4% chance. That is, one in 25 women giving birth would die.

Does maternal mortality have a significant effect on life expectancy of women?

Yes.

The 2008 paper Life Expectancy and Human Capital Investments: Evidence From Maternal Mortality Declines looked at Sri Lanka (admittedly not England), and the improvement in maternal mortality just between 1946 and 1953. They concluded it

increased female life expectancy at age 15 by 4.1%

That is a very impressive improvement. By aged 15, girls have already passed the dangerous first years of their lives. To improve their expected lifespan by an additional 4%, from only the reduced risk of dying during child-birth gained in seven years in the mid-1900s, is almost staggering.

Are women more likely to die during later pregnancies than earlier ones?

It's not quite that simple.

The first birth is the most dangerous, and then the next few are safer. As the woman has more children, the risk grows again.

I draw this conclusion from the review paper The Relationship Between Fertility and Maternal Mortality from the book Contraceptive Use and Controlled Fertility: Health Issues for Women and Children Background Papers.

All the population-based studies indicate and results from hospital studies generally confirm that the first birth and births of high order are strong risk factors for maternal mortality (Table 2). These studies indicate a J-or U-shaped risk with parity: high during the first pregnancy, lowest during the second or third, and high again by the fifth pregnancy. A similar pattern is found for gravidity, with an even stronger relative risk for first pregnancies relative to later-order pregnancies than is observed for first births.

Notes:

  • Definitions:

    In the UK, gravidity is defined as the number of times that a woman has been pregnant and parity is defined as the number of times that she has given birth to a fetus with a gestational age of 24 weeks or more, regardless of whether the child was born alive or was stillborn.

    In the notes, the original author finds that these details of these definitions unfortunately differ between studies.

  • The data discussed above isn't from 100 years ago. It is largely from the 1970s and 1980s, so it might not represent the exact situation in 1915 nor 2015. This is a weakness in this part of the answer.

  • I don't think this section is relevant in any case, because I don't think that was what was intended by the claim, but I include it for completeness. I believe (without anyway of proving it) that the quote was probably intended to mean "Women had a life expectancy in their 40s, because they attempted to have more children than modern women, and each child-birth was riskier than today, so more of them died younger", but it was unfortunately poorly worded or poorly quoted.

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  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Oddthinking
    Oct 9, 2015 at 0:38
  • That graph is striking. It suggests that there were NO medical improvements at all before 1930 and then continual improvements. What changed?
    – Raedwald
    Oct 28, 2015 at 7:48
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    @Raedwald: This is mentioned in the chat room.
    – Oddthinking
    Oct 28, 2015 at 8:12

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