Monday, December 15, 2025
ADVT 
Life

Planning A Baby? Avoid Eating Fast Food

IANS, 04 May, 2018 01:11 PM
    Women, take note! If you eat more of junk food and less of fruits, chances are you will take longer to get pregnant, according to a study.
     
     
    Researchers at the University of Adelaide's Robinson Research Institute asked 5598 women in Australia, New Zealand, the UK and Ireland about their diet. The women, who had not had a baby before, were interviewed by research midwives during their first antenatal visit.
     
     
    Professor Claire Roberts, who led the study, said: "The findings show that eating a good quality diet that includes fruit and minimising fast food consumption improves fertility and reduces the time it takes to get pregnant."
     
     
    Compared to women, who ate fruit three or more times a day in the month before conception, women, who ate fruit less than one to three times a month took half a month longer to become pregnant.
     
     
    Similarly, compared to women who never or rarely ate fast food, women who consumed fast food four or more times a week took nearly a month longer to become pregnant.
     
     
    Among all the couples in the study, 468 (8 percent) couples were classified as infertile (defined as taking longer than a year to conceive) and 2204 (39 percent) conceived within a month. When the researchers looked at the impact of diet on infertility, they found that in women with the lowest intake of fruit, the risk of infertility increased from 8 percent to 12 percent, and in those who ate fast food four or more times a week, the risk of infertility increased from 8 percent to 16 percent.
     
     
    First author Dr Jessica Grieger, said, "We recommend that women who want to become pregnant should align their dietary intakes towards national dietary recommendations for pregnancy. Our data shows that frequent consumption of fast foods delays time to pregnancy."
     
     
     
     
    Previous research has tended to focus on the role that diet plays in women diagnosed with or receiving treatment for infertility; the impact of maternal diet before conception in the general population has not been widely studied. This research was carried out in women recruited to the multi-centre Screening for Pregnancy Endpoints (SCOPE) study between 2004 and 2011. Of the 5598 women, the majority (5258, 94 percent) received no fertility treatments before conception and 340 did.
     
     
    During the first antenatal visit at around 14-16 weeks' gestation, midwives collected information about the time it took to become pregnant and the women's diet. This included details of their diet in the month before conception, and how frequently they consumed fruit, green leafy vegetables, fish and fast foods. Fast foods included burgers, pizza, fried chicken and chips that were bought from take-away or fast food outlets. Fast foods eaten at home (bought from supermarkets, for example) were not included in the data collected and so consumption of this type of food is likely to be under-reported.
     
     
    Couples were excluded from the analysis if they were receiving fertility treatment due to the male partner's infertility.
     
     
    Dr Grieger said: "Most of the women did not have a history of infertility. We adjusted the relationships with pre-pregnancy diet to take account of several factors known to increase the risk of infertility, including elevated body mass index [BMI] and maternal age, smoking and alcohol intake. As diet is a modifiable factor, our findings underscore the importance of considering preconception diet to support timely conception for women planning pregnancy."
     
     
    The researchers also found that while intake of fruit and fast foods affected time to pregnancy, pre-pregnancy intake of green leafy vegetables or fish did not.
     
     
    The study appears in the journal Human Reproduction. 

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Being Indian: Challenge Of Bringing Up 'DESI' Children Abroad

    Being Indian: Challenge Of Bringing Up 'DESI' Children Abroad
    Even as they go on with their lives in different countries across the globe, there is always an underlying desire to inculcate these "Desi" aspects into the lives and habits of their children.

    Being Indian: Challenge Of Bringing Up 'DESI' Children Abroad

    Yoga Fever Grips China Ahead Of International Yoga Day

    Yoga Fever Grips China Ahead Of International Yoga Day
    China also backed India's move in the UN to make June 21 as International Yoga Day, giving a fillip to hundreds of yoga clubs and organisations.

    Yoga Fever Grips China Ahead Of International Yoga Day

    Largest Ever Yoga Event Held In Netherlands

    The largest ever yoga event in the Netherlands was held here with the participation of nearly 1,000 people on Sunday to mark the Third International Day of Yoga.

    Largest Ever Yoga Event Held In Netherlands

    With Age, We Tend To Choose Friends Over Family

    With Age, We Tend To Choose Friends Over Family
    Turns out, blood may make us related, but friends really are the family we choose.

    With Age, We Tend To Choose Friends Over Family

    Blame Lack Of Sexual Satisfaction, Not Porn For Erectile Dysfunction

    Watching porn is not unhealthy, but a study has recently warned that men, who regularly watch porn, are not sexually satisfied in their relationship with their partner and are more likely to suffer erectile dysfunction.

    Blame Lack Of Sexual Satisfaction, Not Porn For Erectile Dysfunction

    Get your Dad the Perfect Gift for Father's Day

    Get your Dad the Perfect Gift for Father's Day
    This Sunday is Father’s Day. Unsure of what to get dad this year? 

    Get your Dad the Perfect Gift for Father's Day