|
Question
I’ve been hearing a lot about
declining fertility in the past few months. What’s
going on?
-- Peggy
Answer
Results of a study published in
April 2001 have given us new information about the age
at which fertility begins to decline. The results have
gotten a lot of publicity and, I suspect, have been
misinterpreted by those who haven’t heard or read
the full stories. The implications aren’t as dire as
the headlines and sound bites made them sound.
Results of the U.S.-Italian study
showed that female fertility begins to decline in the
late 20s, not in the 30s, as we believed, and that
male fertility begins to drop in the late 30’s,
something of a surprise to researchers. These findings
don’t mean that couples can’t conceive as they get
older, just that it may take longer than it would
among those in their early 20s when both sexes are
most fertile. For example, the researchers found that
if couples had sex at the peak time for conception
(two days before ovulation) women between the ages of
19
and 26 had a 50 percent chance of conceiving in that
one menstrual cycle; the odds drop to about 40 percent
for women aged 27 to 34 and to 30 percent among women
aged 35-39 who had a partner of the same age. If the
man was five years older than a woman in this age
range, chances of getting pregnant per menstrual cycle
dropped to around 20 percent.
Remember that these are only
averages. Even among the youngest couples the
probability of pregnancy in any one month ranged from
20 percent to 60 percent.
The results of this study have
prompted some doctors to urge women to try to become
pregnant in their twenties -- not practical or
realistic for many women today. If I were you, I
wouldn’t worry unduly about these new findings.
Chances are a healthy couple will be able to conceive
even after fertility begins to wane. It just may take
a little longer.
By
Andrew Weil, M.D.
|