Tuesday, February 12, 2013

The chance to get pregnant for women


London -Researchers have passed through this study for the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence, which has been formulated health guidelines. Going forward, it is possible to create an online calculator that provides couples with a dipersonalkan predictions.

Hartshorne also add other factors, such as smoking or obesity, is 'not very important' when it wants to get pregnant. Nevertheless, a healthy lifestyle can strengthen opportunities babies born healthy.

 Many women have difficulty conceiving even after doing various kinds of therapies. A formula that predicts the chances of women getting pregnant has been designed to experts.

In this formula, the researchers from the University of Warwick and the London School of Economics combines information about female fertility decline over time and the length of time that has been spent on women to have children.

For example, a 25-year-old woman who had been trying to conceive for six months had a 15 percent chance to contain the following month. This opportunity is declined for women 30 years, at 13 percent, and for women 35 years chances are less than 10 percent.

The rapid biological clock also shows the opportunities pregnant after age 35 years is really getting smaller. Female 40 years old who has been trying to conceive for six months only had a five percent chance of getting pregnant.

As reported by the Daily Mail page, October 5, 2012, the calculation of the formula also shows that while women aged 25 years and have been trying for 13 months to get pregnant, then the chances quickly dropped below 10 percent. But women 35 years had only six months before the chances are really thin.

During this time, the old rules are those who believe that trying to have children should wait until at least one year before seeking help, even though doctors have warned about the effect of age. "People feel embarrassed, angry, and do not want to see a doctor. Guy, in particular, a little reluctant to see a doctor," said one of the researchers, Professor Geraldine Hartshorne.

With the passage of time and people have been trying to have a child, continued Hartshorne, they start to stress and anger, which could affect their chances to have sex and get pregnant. "Closer to the doctor about personal problems are daunting, but knowing the right time to begin an investigation would be useful to step into the future," said Hartshorne, as written in the journal PLoS One.