Hi

For those of you who teach anything related to marriage and family,
you might have seen this already.  On the surface it sure sounds like
ya better get goin' on those baby plans sooner than you might have
planned, but a deeper look seems to indicate those plans might just
be able to remain intact.

In my M&F class, we discuss the pros and cons of waiting to have children.
Some students are always surprised that biology constricts their
reproductive plans more than they previously imagined.  

Jim G

Study Examines Human Fertility
Tue Apr 30, 2:01 AM ET
By EMMA ROSS, AP Medical Writer

New research has provided the most precise insight yet into when biological
clocks start ticking loudly - and it's sooner than once thought: age 27 for
women and 35 for men.

Until now, it was thought that women's fertility starts to drop
significantly in the early 30s, with a big plunge after 35. But the new
study indicates that, on average, female fertility begins its meaningful
slide at age 27.

And while the decline in human fertility tied to aging had traditionally
been attributed to the female factor, the study, published Tuesday in the
journal Human Reproduction, showed that men's fertility starts dwindling
after 35.

Nevertheless, experts said the findings should not raise undue concern. The
results mean it may take a month or two longer to conceive than it does for
younger people, they said. The ages at which declines were seen are only
averages and there is a wide range in fertility at any specific age.

"Certainly very young women in their early 20s are more fertile than women
in their late 20s and early 30s. But I suspect that the fertility of those
women who are around 30 is high enough that it doesn't give them a real
cause for concern or worry up to the age of 35," said Dr. Chris Ford, a
researcher at the University of Bristol in England who studies fertility and
age, but was not involved with the study.

The study involved 782 healthy couples from across Europe who were using
only the rhythm method of family planning. Women kept daily records of their
body temperature, recorded the days they had sex and which days they had
their menstrual periods.

The researchers then categorized the women into four age groups - 19-26,
27-29, 30-34 and 35-39 - and recorded the ages of their partners.

There were a total of 433 pregnancies.

Women in the 27-29 age group had lower pregnancy chances on average 
than women aged 19-26. The likelihood of pregnancy did not noticeably 
decline between the age groups 27-29 and 30-34, but then dropped again 
from age 35.

The probability of getting pregnant on any specific day in the menstrual
cycle was twice as high for women under 27 as it was for women 35 and 
older, the study found.

Assuming that the couples had sex at the best time for conception - two 
days before ovulation - and presuming that the men were the same age as 
the women, women younger than 27 had a 50 percent chance of conceiving 
during that menstrual cycle.

This fell to about 40 percent in women aged 27-34, and after 35, it was less
than 30 percent.

"Although we noted a decline in female fertility in the late 20s, what we
found was a decrease in the probability of becoming pregnant per menstrual
cycle, not in the probability of eventually achieving a pregnancy," said one
researcher, David Dunson, a biostatistician at the U.S. National Institute
of Environmental Health Sciences.

The study also found that men's fertility dropped after 35. Previous
research had hinted that male fertility starts to decline in the 40s or 50s.

The study found that while a 35-year-old woman with a partner the same age
had a 29 percent chance of getting pregnant in one month, her chances
dropped to 18 percent if her partner was 40.

No decline in male fertility was seen before age 35, and the man's age only
seemed to matter when the woman passed 35, the study found.

At the age of 40, men were 40 percent less likely to get their partners
pregnant in a month than they were at the age of 35, Dunson said.

"The observed decline is not dramatic, and you could hardly use the results
to recommend males to deposit a frozen semen sample at age 35 in case 
they might want to be fathers at a later age," said Dr. Svend Juul, a professor
at the Institute for Epidemiology and Social Medicine at the University of
Aarhus in Denmark, who was not connected with the research.

One reassuring finding, experts said, was the super fertile period - the six
days leading up to ovulation - remained the same for women of all ages. 
Some scientists have suspected that part of the reason why it is more difficult
for older women to get pregnant could be that her fertile time could be
shorter than that of younger women.



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