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The Times 31.5.2023: Grannies are great at keeping children healthy

The Times 31.5.2023 Grannies are great at keeping children healthy

Kaya Burgess, Science Reporter
Wednesday May 31 2023, 7:40am BST, The Times
Grannies are great at keeping children healthy (thetimes.co.uk)

Enlisting a wise and willing grandmother to help with childcare can save parents money but spending time with granny can also prolong children’s lives by protecting them from infection, scientists have found.

Children are less likely to die from conditions such as pox, lung and diarrhoeal infections if their family has a grandmother to call on, specifically a maternal grandmother, to offer “care and wisdom”, a study suggests.

Researchers from the University of Turku in Finland and the Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology in Germany examined data on 9,705 children aged from 0 to 15 who lived in Finland between 1761 and 1900.
Of these, 3,857 died before reaching 15. Their causes of death were noted, while parish records showed if they had living grandmothers.

The most common causes of death were smallpox, pulmonary infections such as pneumonia and tuberculosis, measles, “diarrhoeal” diseases such as cholera and dysentery, and accidents including drowning, suffocation, falls and, in at least one case, being kicked by a horse.

The study, published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, concluded: “We found that grandmother presence contributes to the survival and reproductive success of kin by increasing survival from infections.”
Children with living maternal grandmothers were 4.4 per cent more likely to reach the age of 15 without dying from smallpox, lung and diarrhoeal infections, though it did not reduce the risk from measles or accidents or make parents more likely to vaccinate.

Despite the study using a historical data set, the findings are “important for public health” and demonstrate the “significant role of grandmother care” in raising children, the study found.
The study said that grandmothers can help by “providing nutrition and childcare” and “monetary” contributions and can also pass on knowledge, including through the “early recognition of symptoms”.

Women who live long enough to play a hands-on role in rearing their grandchildren may also pass on genes that promote longer, healthier lives.

The benefit was not seen from paternal grandmothers, possibly because many children in 19th century Finland lived in the same household as their father’s mother, who provided competition for resources. The authors said the study provided further evidence that in “historical and contemporary human societies, grandmothers contribute to raising grandchildren, thereby improving grandchild survival”.

It is widely believed that human women have evolved to live for several decades after ceasing to be fertile in order to provide care for their grandchildren, they noted.

The study said that grandmothers can “provide knowledge in childcare, particularly during critical times such as sickness and epidemics”, noting that separate studies have found grandmothers play a key role in encouraging parents to vaccinate their children.
 
Read the original article:
Ukonaho S, Chapman SN, Briga M, Lummaa V. 2023: Grandmother presence improved grandchild survival against childhood infections but not vaccination coverage in historical Finns. Proc. R. Soc. B 290: 20230690.
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2023.0690
 

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Virpi in WEF Annual Meeting 2019 in Davos

Virpi Lummaa is participating in the World Economic Forum Annual meeting in Davos, speaking about her research e.g. in the session ERC IdeaLab: Healthy Ageing.

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Lummaa Group held a truly good Annual Meeting 2018 in Seili


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New paper accepted for publication: Human Reproductive Update

Laisk T, Tšuiko O, Jatsenko T, Hõrak P, Otala M, Lahdenperä M, Lummaa V, Tuuri T, Salumets A, Tapanainen JS:

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New Paper: Grandmotherhood across the demographic transition

Simon's latest work on the demography of grandmothers is now out in PLoS ONE. 

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New Papers: Demography of grandparenthood and testing the X-linked grandmother hypothesis

Two papers out now from Simon's PhD project!

1) Changes in the Length of Grandparenthood in Finland 1790-1959, published in the Finnish Yearbook of Population Reasarch. In this paper, the team investigated how the shared time between grandparents and grandchildren changed across the demographic transition and with industrialisation. This shared time was low and stable before these major events, and began to increase rapidly after they began.

2) Limited support for the X-linked grandmother hypothesis in pre-industrial Finland, published in Biology Letters. Here, we tested whether slight differences in relatedness via the X-chromosome might lead to differences the survival of male and female grandchildren with maternal or paternal grandmothers. Though two of three predictions were supported, we concluded that the X-linked grandmother hypothesis cannot account for lineage differences by itself. 

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Prof. Virpi Lummaa

Academy Professor
virpi.lummaa (at) utu.fi

Dr. Anne Hemmi

Research Coordinator
hemmi (at) utu.fi

University of Turku
Department of Biology
Natura
Vesilinnantie 5
20014 University of Turku
Finland

Academy of Finland
University of Turku