The Ideal Interval Between
Pregnancies
It has long been recognized that having offspring with short intervals between
pregnancies is associated with a high risk of having a damaged child. An unanswered
question has been what is the ideal interpregnancy interval?
Early this year, researchers based in Utah reported on their attempt to answer that
concern by examining records related to the 300,000 singleton infants born in Utah between
1989 and 1996.
This team of researchers concluded that infants
conceived 18 to 23 months
after a previous birth have the best chance of being born healthy and this is considered
to be the ideal interval for a mother.
Seeking to learn more about the natural interval between pregnancies in
humans, the research workers had separated out and analyzed data regarding possible risk
conditions, such as the mothers age at delivery, her nourishment status, tobacco and
alcohol use, the number of years of her education, and a dozen other reproductive risk
factors.
The researchers were comparing these factors against the frequency that three adverse
outcomes occurred in the newborns low birth weight, premature delivery, and small
size for gestational age.
Each adverse outcome showed a pattern of both shorter and longer interpregnancy intervals
being associated with higher risks.
(Effect of the Interval Between Pregnancies on Perinatal Outcomes, Bao-Ping Zhu et al; New
England Journal of Medicine, February 25, 1999)