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Teenagers Guide: Risks of Infertility

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Lack of money, building a career and not finding the right partner are all reasons why teenagers and carrier building women may leave having a baby until later in life.

Today fertility clinics are full of women who, for a variety of reasons, have left it too late to conceive naturally: couples who didn’t find each other in time, women on rollercoaster careers that don’t allow for babies, and single women who come with their mothers, each as desperate as the other for a child or grandchild. Women often turn up at 38 and say ‘I wish somebody had told me that age had such a big effect on fertility

With lot of stress placed on contraception, now is the need to place fertility education in curriculum in secondary schools so we can start addressing the other side of the coin, in terms of fertility awareness and preventing infertility. Adding fertility to the sex education curriculum would ‎introduce complete and comprehensive reproductive health education which will help to reduce STDs and teenage pregnancies.

It can take up to a generation to achieve a result, so we’ve got to start now. The first thing we is to increase the awareness in young girls of the effect of their age on their fertility with the stress that  the decline starts at 30, it becomes rapid after 35, and even more rapid after 37.5.

Girls who exercise excessively and lose bodyweight can find their fertility affected; being overweight can have a similarly negative impact, and smoking can bring on early menopause.

I know it sounds easy to keep putting off starting a family – but seeing the anguish that it can cause, if there are problems, every day can be stressful and sad.

Risk Factors of Infertility 

Many of the risk factors for both male and female infertility are the same. According to the Mayo Clinic, risks include:

WomensHealth.gov lists the risks above and adds:

Workplace environmental contaminants may also decrease fertility, as can bicycle riding and constricting underwear for men.

It is easy to see from these risk factors why it is important for young people to know that their present behavior may cause them heartache later in life when they are ready to have a family.

The World Health Organization, the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM), and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) recognize infertility as a disease.

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