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Women who eat fast food and little or no fruit take longer to become pregnant, study finds

Women who consumed fast food four or more times a week took nearly a month longer to become pregnant than those who didn’t.

WOMEN WHO EAT less fruit and more fast food take longer to get pregnant and are less likely to conceive within a year, a new study published in the Human Reproduction journal has found.

During their first antenatal visit, research midwives in Ireland, the UK, Australia and New Zealand asked 5,598 women about their diet. The women had not had a baby before.

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%) couples were classified as infertile (defined as taking longer than a year to conceive) and 2,204 (39%) 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% to 12%, and in those who ate fast food four or more times a week, the risk of infertility increased from 8% to 16%.

“These 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,” Professor Claire Roberts, Llyod Cox Professorial Research Fellow at the University of Adelaide, who led the study, said.

First author, Dr Jessica Grieger, post-doctoral research fellow at University of Adelaide, added: “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.”

The study

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.

Couples were excluded from the analysis if they were receiving fertility treatment due to the male partner’s infertility.

“Most 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,” Dr Grieger said.

“As diet is a modifiable factor, our findings underscore the importance of considering preconception diet to support timely conception for women planning pregnancy,” she said.

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.

Limitations of the study include the fact that collecting data on pre-pregnancy diet relied on retrospective recall and included a limited range of foods. Information on the fathers’ diet was not collected, and it is possible that other, unknown factors might have affected the results. A major strength is the large group of women included in the study.

“For any dietary intake assessment, one needs to use some caution regarding whether participant recall is an accurate reflection of dietary intake,” Dr Grieger said.

“However, given that many women do not change their diet from pre-pregnancy to during pregnancy, we believe that the women’s recall of their diet one month prior to pregnancy is likely to be reasonably accurate,” she said.

The researchers are continuing their work and plan to identify particular dietary patterns, rather than individual food groups, that may be associated with how long it takes women to become pregnant.

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    Mute Gareth Keenan
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    May 5th 2018, 10:58 AM

    A bad diet is bad for you. Stop the press.

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    Mute GiGi O'Dwyer
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    May 5th 2018, 11:12 AM

    A load of bollox i don’t eat fast food a lot once a month or six weeks and i eat plenty of fruit. I was trying for years to become pregnant and I’m pregnant now half way there so there you go stop with the bull

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    Mute Dave O Keeffe
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    May 5th 2018, 12:32 PM

    @GiGi O’Dwyer: you understand that one case doesn’t disprove a study right? Or are you now claiming that it’s not true that bodies function better when fed better?

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    Mute GiGi O'Dwyer
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    May 6th 2018, 2:29 AM

    @Dave O Keeffe: not saying that at all Dave but its barbaric its they way they say it eating better is better for u but telling woman who are trying to get pregnant that they shouldn’t eat what they want is so wrong

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    Mute Amused Bystander
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    May 6th 2018, 11:54 AM

    @GiGi O’Dwyer: eh… should we ignore the truth in case we offend people?

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    Mute Dearbhla Russell
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    May 5th 2018, 11:24 AM

    Excellent. Finally a contraception that women can enjoy.
    (Until some man in a dress or suit says otherwise)

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    Mute Jeffrey McMahon
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    May 5th 2018, 11:34 AM

    @Dearbhla Russell: between that and personality some women will have an infinite supply of 100% effective contraception

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    Mute Dearbhla Russell
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    May 6th 2018, 7:55 AM

    @Jeffrey McMahon: ahh no. Thats just for you. They dont want you.

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    Mute bopter
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    May 5th 2018, 10:59 AM

    This is great news. Darwinism at work!

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    Mute The Thinker
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    May 5th 2018, 4:28 PM

    @bopter: yeah but it contradicts the evidence. Look at any social housing estate and the food they eat, and the amount of kids they have!

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    Mute Dearbhla Russell
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    May 6th 2018, 7:56 AM

    @the druid: the ging gang goo.
    Are you 8?

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    Mute john doe
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    May 5th 2018, 1:33 PM

    I would like to see similar studies on fruit n veg consumption and the role it plays in disease prevention.

    Why, unless morbidly obese or anarexic do doctors never ask about diet?? Surely this is the first thing to get right when looking after overall health.

    Im no conspiricy theorist but is it because there is no money in it for the medical industry?

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    Mute Jack Jackson
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    May 5th 2018, 9:08 PM

    @john doe: Of course!

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    Mute John Hagin Meade
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    May 5th 2018, 8:00 PM

    Any woman that wants to get pregnant should get lots of big micks, sorry big macs and they should do the job OK.

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    Mute Paul Jennings
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    May 6th 2018, 1:11 AM

    McContraceptive.

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    Mute Jack Jackson
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    May 5th 2018, 9:07 PM

    Great…..feed em more junk and less fruit. It’ll save on a lot!!!!!

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    Mute Andre le Flohic
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    May 5th 2018, 1:50 PM

    where are the results of the statistical analysis ? from my point of view the chi2 must not be signiticatif !

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    Mute Petra Becker
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    May 29th 2018, 1:02 PM

    I don’t eat fast food at all but consume lots of fruits and this doesn’t change anything for better. However, I know dozens of mommies who don’t only eat french fries and burges almost every day but also take their kids to burger king as if it was a nice place to hang out with kids. I wonder how many people are behind the study. This apparently is a way to improve overall health state but I doubt it’s the best way to boost one’s fertility. Getting pregnant is not about healthy diet, I believe it’s a bit different.

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