Click on a link below to share this article with your favourite link sharing site
-
1. Top off your spring style with one of our favourite shirts, blouses, tees ...
Read more -
2. Got a spring wedding in the diary? Find your perfect outfit - whatever the...
Read more -
3. Browse our 30 top dresses under £30
Read more -
4. See the best street style looks from Ladies Day at The Cheltenham Festival
Read more -
5. See the Sex and the City ladies reunite on the red carpet, plus all the st...
Read more
Diet change good for older mothers
Women who make 'drastic' changes in their diet in their forties and fifties could increase their chance of having a baby, according to a nutrionist.
Sarah Dobbyn, author of The Fertility Diet, said the influence of diet on fertility is too often disregarded.
Dobbyn states that cutting out alcohol and sugar should allow women to hit the 'snooze button' on their biological clocks.
According to Dobbyn's book, if women in their fifties improve their diets they can potentially conceive later in life.
The diet could also be a saviour for women who think IVF treatment is their only option for getting pregnant.
Dobyyn said: 'Huge amounts of money are being spent on assisted conception techniques by hopeful couples who do not know that alcoholic and caffeinated beverages are liquid contraceptives, sweeteners can prevent ovulation and seemingly innocent foods such as peas, rhubarb and soya all inhibit fertility.'
Dobbyn's book, The Fertility Diet, lays out a month-by-month diet and lifestyle plan that should be followed by both man and woman to increase the woman's chances of conceiving.
The diet suggests cutting out smoking, artificial sweeteners, alcohol, caffeine and soya in the first four weeks. Peas and rhubarb are also banned as they both have links to infertility.
During the second month couples are encouraged to cut out all meat, sugar and dairy products. Foods that are recommended include unlimited quantities of beans, pulses, organic herbs, spices and nuts.
However some IVF doctors are dubious about the benefits of the diet. Fertility expert Professor Bill Ledger said: 'We tend to create a lot of guilt in people these days. The worry is that some gullible young woman will read this book and start living that life and miss out on a lot of fun and normality.'
Monday 28 July 2008
Rate this ...
-
Next Article
Postnatal depression breakthrough Read more...
-
Last Article
Life expectancy for HIV increased Read more...









Have your say ...
Add your own comment
I am the author of the Fertility Diet. I wish 'Fertility' academics would actually read my book, including the 24 pages of footnotes, citing more than 500 medical studies before they dismiss my research, suggesting readers are 'gullible'. I invite women of all ages who want a baby to read my book and make their own minds up as to whether the science I uncovered in 3.5 years research is sound or not.
The livelihood of IVF doctors is of course threatened by a natural nutritional approach......
Comment by Sarah Dobbyn on July 29 16:19