http://www.hindustantimes.com/StoryPage/StoryPage.aspx?sectionName=TabloidSectionPage&id=4a8ba87c-b760-4bab-bdb8-b70c3666a203&Headline=PTips+to+prevent+infertility%2fP


Tips to prevent infertility

ANI
Kuala Lampur, July 14, 2009
First Published: 15:37 IST(14/7/2009)
Last Updated: 19:58 IST(14/7/2009)




Women better avoid late marriage and men tight pants, for they may lead to 
fewer babies, according to a Malaysian study. 
Dr V. Jeyabalan a Pantai Hospital fertility specialist, says that blames 
smoking, casual sex, and junk food are the other factors that are to blame for 
causing infertility. 

"The changing role of women is the main reason for their infertility," the New 
Straits-Times quoted him as saying.  "They are getting married late now as they 
have to build a career alongside men to become equal breadwinners," he added. 
He said so while reacting to a recent United Nations Children''s Fund report 
that Malaysians were having fewer babies these days, compared with the 
situation in 1990.

According to him, the intake of junk food-which mostly contained additives and 
meats injected with hormones-has increased among career-oriented women  He says 
that such women also have multiple sex partners, and that they sometimes even 
indulge in casual sex, which results in sexually transmitted diseases. 
"Venereal diseases such as gonorrhoea and syphilis combined with previous 
abortions and smoking, which has gradually become increasingly common among 
women, can prevent conception and sometimes cause miscarriages," he said. 

He said of the 30 couples he saw on the average daily, most of the men and 
women were aged between 30 and 40 seeking to have their first child. Jeyabalan 
pointed out that wearing tight pants and the presence of petrol fumes and 
chemicals around their workplaces generally reduce fertility among men. He 
called on the Government to get insurance companies to pay the bills of those 
seeking fertility treatment."In Western countries, because fertility treatments 
are expensive, the cost is either subsidised by the government or it can be 
claimed against a patient''s medical policy. But in Malaysia, those who suffer 
from childlessness can do neither," he said.

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