logo
Early Puberty, Childbirth Linked To Faster Ageing, High Diabetes Risk: Study

Early Puberty, Childbirth Linked To Faster Ageing, High Diabetes Risk: Study

NDTV15 hours ago
When puberty begins very early or a first baby arrives in the late teens, it can feel like life is simply running ahead of schedule. New research suggests the body may be doing the same when women go through these life and health landmarks early: ageing faster under the hood. A recently published study in eLife reports that early menarche (first period) and childbirth before 21 are associated with accelerated biological ageing and sharply higher risks of age-related diseases. Conversely, later puberty and later first birth were linked with slower epigenetic ageing, lower frailty, and reduced risk of conditions like type 2 diabetes and Alzheimer's disease.
The findings, based on large-scale genetic and cohort analyses, build on a growing body of evidence that reproductive milestones can influence lifelong metabolic and cardiovascular health. For Indian readers, especially women, this matters. India now has an estimated 101 million people living with diabetes and 136 million with prediabetes, many of them women balancing work, family and caregiving. Understanding how reproductive timing intersects with long-term risk can help women and clinicians plan screening, prevention and support without stigma or blame.
What Did The New Study Find?
Researchers analysed data from hundreds of thousands of participants and used genetic approaches to reduce confounding, concluding that early menarche (before approximately 11 years) and early childbirth (before 21 years) are linked to faster biological or "epigenetic" ageing and substantially higher odds of several age-related diseases. In the UK Biobank subset, the authors report that early menarche and early first birth almost doubled the risk of type 2 diabetes and heart failure and quadrupled the risk of obesity; later timing showed the opposite pattern of slower ageing and lower disease risk. These results are consistent with an "antagonistic pleiotropy" idea: traits that support early reproduction may carry long-term health costs.
Independent, recent evidence supports the link between reproductive events and ageing biology. For example, a 2024 study published in PNAS found pregnancy was associated with "older" biological signatures on certain epigenetic measures, while broader research connects epigenetic age acceleration with chronic disease and functional decline. Together, these strands point to a real, measurable interface between reproductive history and later-life health.
Why This Matters For Women's Health In India
India is grappling with a high and rising metabolic disease burden. The ICMR-INDIAB analysis estimated 101 million with diabetes and 136 million with prediabetes in 2023-figures with clear implications for screening and prevention among women across the life course. If early puberty and early childbirth amplify future metabolic and cardiac risk, earlier and more proactive monitoring becomes essential.
There are also population trends to consider. Nationally representative analyses, especially one published in Scientific Reports in 2024, show the mean age at menarche in India is about 13.5 years, with a gradual secular decline across birth cohorts-meaning some girls are entering puberty earlier than previous generations. While early menarche is not destiny, its association with later risk highlights the importance of adolescent nutrition, physical activity, psychosocial support and timely sexual-reproductive health counselling.
For young women who become mothers in their teens, even late teens, the new findings argue for stronger postpartum follow-up, diabetes and lipid screening, and support to maintain heart-healthy behaviours while juggling childcare, work and study.
How Could Early Reproductive Timing Influence Disease Risk?
Scientists increasingly look at epigenetic ageing clocks, the chemical tags on DNA that track biological wear-and-tear. Stressors such as rapid developmental change, pregnancy, under-nutrition or psychosocial adversity may accelerate these clocks in some contexts. Early reproductive events might therefore "pull forward" biological ageing, interacting with well-known drivers like diet quality, physical inactivity, sleep debt, tobacco exposure and air pollution. The result is a higher lifetime probability of metabolic and cardiovascular disease-particularly without regular screening and risk-factor control.
Help young girls and women understand their medical history and why it matters
Photo Credit: Pexels
What Every Woman Should Note: Practical Takeaways
Whenever a new study comes out claiming findings that may have long-term impact on public health, it is natural for readers to get alarmed. However, it is very important that Indian women take note of this study and take the following practical takeaways:
This is risk, not fate
Early periods or a first baby in the teens does not doom anyone to diabetes or heart disease. It signals a need for closer prevention and screening methods which work. Lifestyle changes and evidence-based care can substantially reduce risk.
Know your numbers-regularly
If you had early menarche or gave birth before 21, ask your clinician about earlier and periodic screening: fasting glucose or HbA1c, blood pressure, lipids, BMI/waist, and (if pregnant now or planning) screening for gestational diabetes. Given India's burden, routine checks from your mid-20s onward are reasonable, or sooner if you have weight gain, strong family history or symptoms.
Prioritise cardio-metabolic habits
Aim for 150-300 minutes/week of moderate activity plus muscle-strengthening twice weekly; build vegetable-rich, fibre-forward plates with adequate protein; limit ultra-processed foods and added sugars; sleep 7-9 hours; avoid or stop smoking; and reduce second-hand smoke exposure. These steps delay biological ageing patterns and cut diabetes/CVD risk.
Pregnancy planning and postpartum care matter
If you had a teen pregnancy or gestational diabetes, discuss postpartum glucose testing and long-term follow-up. Evidence shows pregnancy can shift epigenetic ageing markers; checking in after delivery protects future health.
Support adolescents
For parents and educators, provide balanced nutrition, physical activity, iron sufficiency, mental-health support, and age-appropriate reproductive education. Earlier menarche trends make these investments even more important.
There are also some important caveats everyone should note:
Association vs causation: The eLife paper used genetic and observational methods to strengthen causal inference, yet unmeasured factors can remain. Findings should guide screening and prevention, not stigma.
Population differences: Much evidence comes from cohorts such as UK Biobank; translation to all Indian sub-populations requires local studies. Still, given India's diabetes prevalence, a prudent, preventive approach is justified.
Biology is modifiable: Epigenetic ageing markers are not fixed. Lifestyle change, appropriate therapy for blood sugar and blood pressure, and mental-health support can improve long-term outcomes.
The new analysis adds a compelling chapter to women's health: earlier puberty and early childbirth appear to accelerate biological ageing and raise risks for diabetes, heart failure and obesity, while later timing generally protects. For Indian women, the message is empowering, not alarming. Know your reproductive history, screen earlier if you're higher-risk, and double down on everyday prevention. Those steps, sustained over years, are powerful tools to bend the risk curve in your favour.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

12-foot-long python rescued from Bharathiar University campus in Coimbatore
12-foot-long python rescued from Bharathiar University campus in Coimbatore

Time of India

time18 minutes ago

  • Time of India

12-foot-long python rescued from Bharathiar University campus in Coimbatore

Coimbatore: A 12-foot-long Indian rock python found inside the Bharathiar University campus here was rescued and released into the reserve forest on Thursday. A non-teaching staff found the snake inside the motor chamber at the university and informed the authorities, who in turn alerted a rescue team. The team from 'First Heart Foundation Network,' an NGO, rushed to the spot. Snake rescuer V Saanthakumar rescued the reptile weighing about 15kg and handed it over to the forest department. It was later released into a reserve forest near Kanuvai. Stay updated with the latest local news from your city on Times of India (TOI). Check upcoming bank holidays , public holidays , and current gold rates and silver prices in your area.

Pvt hosps to suspend cashless treatment in RGHS from Aug 25
Pvt hosps to suspend cashless treatment in RGHS from Aug 25

Time of India

time19 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Pvt hosps to suspend cashless treatment in RGHS from Aug 25

Jaipur: Rajasthan Alliance of Hospital Associations (RAHA), an umbrella of hospital associations, Thursday threatened to suspend cashless facilities for RGHS beneficiaries from Aug 25 in private hospitals. It alleged that there is no sustainable financial and operational plan for RGHS and lack of communication between political leadership (chief minister and health minister) and the bureaucracy, leading to policies that are disconnected from ground realities. "Currently, hospitals and IPD pharmacies generate bills of approximately Rs 350 crore per month. To run the scheme smoothly, an annual budget of Rs 4,200 crore is needed, while the allocation is only Rs 3,000 crore. This shortfall of Rs 1,200 crore leads to payment delays, arbitrary deductions, rejections, and queries," RAHA said. RAHA demanded that govt should maintain a 45-day payment cycle for hospitals. Alternatively, return to the reimbursement model to maintain self-regulation and financial discipline. Develop Medical Decision Protocols (MDP) for OPD and admissions, establish clear SOPs for billing and payment processes, and restart the scheme with an appropriate budget and strengthen the government health infrastructure and relieve private hospitals from unstable financial burdens. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Your Finger Shape Says a Lot About Your Personality, Read Now Tips and Tricks Undo Former chief minister Ashok Gehlot alleged that RGHS faced issues, causing inconvenience to lakhs of govt employees, pensioners and their families. "Our Congress govt designed the RGHS scheme based on the Indian govt's CGHS plan to provide govt employees with cashless and straightforward access to medicines and treatment. This scheme ran smoothly until Dec 2023. If any discrepancies were found at a hospital or medical store, action was taken according to the rules," Gehlot wrote on 'X'. "A few days ago, private hospitals and medical stores announced suspension of treatment and medicines under RGHS due to non-payment. Govt promised to make payments, but treatment is being halted again due to lack of payment. State govt needs to demonstrate commitment and policy to keep this scheme running," he wrote. Stay updated with the latest local news from your city on Times of India (TOI). Check upcoming bank holidays , public holidays , and current gold rates and silver prices in your area.

US Food Authority Issues Warning Against This Indian Cookware Brand. Here's Why
US Food Authority Issues Warning Against This Indian Cookware Brand. Here's Why

NDTV

time21 minutes ago

  • NDTV

US Food Authority Issues Warning Against This Indian Cookware Brand. Here's Why

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued a safety alert regarding a particular Indian-made cookware after tests revealed it could leach unsafe levels of lead into food. The alert, issued on August 13, 2025, warns both retailers and consumers against selling or using the affected imported utensils. The cookware is a Kadai/Karahi by Tiger White, manufactured by Saraswati Strips Pvt. Ltd. in India under the name Pure Aluminium Utensils (Tiger White). The FDA stated that kadhai (woks) made of aluminium, brass, and alloys such as Hindalium/Hindolium or Indalium/Indolium tested positive for lead contamination when used for cooking. This makes the food unsafe for consumption. Also Read: Watch: Throwback Video Shows India's First McDonald's Opening In Vasant Kunj, Delhi One known retailer of cookware is Mannan Supermarket, Jamaica, New York. However, the FDA has not been able to confirm the distributor responsible for the recall, raising concerns that the product may still be available in stores. Retailers have been asked to stop selling this utensil, and consumers have been advised not to use it for either cooking or food storage. Why Is Lead Contamination Risk A Serious Concern Lead is a toxic metal with no safe level of exposure. Even minimal amounts can cause severe health issues, particularly in children, pregnant women, and breastfeeding mothers. Possible health effects include: In children, learning difficulties, reduced IQ, and behavioural issues can occur even without apparent symptoms. In adults, symptoms may include fatigue, headaches, stomach pain, vomiting, and neurological changes with higher exposure. Add NDTV As A Trusted Source Also Read: This 'No-Menu' Restaurant In Florida Serves Only Three Items - But Diners Don't Mind Advice For Consumers If They Have Purchased This Cookware The US FDA strongly advises consumers to: Stop using and discard the affected cookware immediately. Avoid donating or refurbishing the utensils to prevent further use. Consult a healthcare provider if concerned about lead exposure or elevated blood lead levels. Advertisement For the latest food news, health tips and recipes, like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter and YouTube. Tags: Food News Indian Cookware US FDA Show full article

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store