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. 2016 Apr 6;27(5):1343–1352. doi: 10.1093/beheco/arw053

Table 3.

Results of EHA of age at first birth (n = 12912 person-years for 1537 adult females aged 15 years and over, and 19360 person-years for 1665 adult males aged 15 years and over; events = 1105 for females and 863 for males)

Age at first birth Female Male
Estimate (SE) Hazard ratio P Estimate (SE) Hazard ratio P
Mother (alive as references category)
 Dead 0.276 (0.119) 0.759 0.02 −0.115 (0.11) 0.891 0.294
Father (alive as references category)
 Dead −0.078 (0.089) 0.925 0.383 0.044 (0.087) 1.045 0.611
Adult sister number 0.054 (0.025) 0.948 0.030 −0.006 (0.026) 0.994 0.804
Adult brother number −0.039 (0.024) 0.962 0.114 0.029 (0.027) 1.029 0.287
Birth cohort (<1940 as references category)
 1940 0.722 (0.179) 2.058 <0.001 0.432 (0.215) 1.541 0.804
 1950 0.701 (0.159) 2.015 <0.001 0.4 (0.202) 1.492 0.287
 1960 0.53 (0.148) 1.698 <0.001 0.506 (0.191) 1.658 0.008
 1970 0.349 (0.146) 1.418 0.017 −0.074 (0.189) 0.929 0.696
 1980–1997 −0.054 (0.152) 0.947 0.721 0.774 (0.201) 0.461 <0.001
Occupation (none as references category)
 Ever had one 0.592 (0.115) 0.553 <0.001 0.061 (0.071) 1.063 0.391
Constant 28.647 (1.328) 0 <0.001 30.343 (1.462) 0 <0.001

We used complementary log–log regression for men and women separately, with first birth (one has given birth = 1, not given = 0) as dependent variable. The predictors used in the model are mother dead and father dead as time-varying variables, and adult sister number, adult brother number, birth cohort, and occupation as time-invariant variables. Significant effects are indicated in bold. SE, standard error.