Women who give birth at this age live longer

A recent study found that women who give birth to children in their mid-twenties live longer.

And a new study conducted by Seoul University in South Korea reported that researchers found that women who give birth at the age of 25 are more likely to live longer, according to "Daily Mail" and "RT".

Previous research has linked childbirth in your thirties to longevity, with experts suggesting childbirth may speed up the aging process.

After surveying data on 4,044 women in two regions in South Korea, Ansan and Anseong, the research team found that having children before or after their mid-20s increases the risk of death by 5%, according to findings published in the medical journal Maturitas.

Specifically, the researchers determined the most appropriate age for childbearing between 24 and 25 years, and correlated greater reproductive age with increased cardiovascular disease, as well as "all-cause mortality" within 18 years.

The trend of the data was "U", meaning that the risk of death was greater the further away from the age of 24 or 25 when the women gave birth.

The researchers said that very young mothers tend to be from disadvantaged regions, which puts them at greater risk of developing a range of mental and physical illnesses.

They speculated that the burden of childbearing and childbirth might be more difficult for older mothers.

The researchers compared data for 1498 women who gave birth to their first child between the ages of 20 and 23, 1033 mothers who gave birth to their first child at the age of 24-25, and 1513 women who gave birth to their first child between the ages of 26 and 36. The researchers then used government health records to follow the women after 18 years.

A total of 243 women died during the study period, most of them in the younger mothers category and one third in the older age group.

The researchers analyzed deaths from cardiovascular diseases, such as heart attacks and strokes, as well as all causes of death.

They found that cardiovascular disease survival rates were 97.3% for younger mothers, 99.6% for women in their mid-20s and 98.7% for older mothers 18 years after the birth of their first child.

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