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Correlation Between Mothers Diet and Childs Gender Manchester

research suggests that whether women give birth to a girl or a boy is highly dependent on their diet. Those of us who eat more around the time of conception are more likely to have boys, while the rest of us will probably be looking at a pink nursery.

Anthony Ross Broadhurst Smith
0161 276 6750
The Warrell Unit St Mary's Hospital
Manchester
Sarah Helen Vause
0161 276 1234
St. Mary's Hospital Hathersage Road
Manchester
Kathleen Margaret Mary (Karina) Reynolds
0161 276 6278
Department of Obstetrics Gynaecology & Reproductive Healthcare Whitworth Pa
Manchester
Boundary Medical Practice (training practice)
0161 227 9785
63 Booth Street West, Hulme
Manchester
Bedford House Medical Centre (training practice)
0161 3309880
Bedford House Medical Centre, Glebe Street, Ashton-under-Lyne
Lancashire
Paul Donnai
0161 276 1234
St. Mary's Hospital Hathersage Road
Manchester
Dr Ansari Partners
0161 330 2131
Trafalgar Square Surgery, 193 Old Street, Ashton-Under-Lyne
Lancashire
Tracey Ann Johnston
0161 276 6116
St Mary's Hospital for Women & Children Whitworth Park
Manchester
The Highlands
0161 3302440
The Highlands, 156 Stockport Road, Ashton-under-Lyne
Lancashire
Tame Valley Medical Centre
0161 3307747
Dr Rubner & Partner, Glebe Street, Ashton Under Lyne
Lancashire
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Correlation Between Mothers Diet and Childs Gender

Supernanny Team Logo By  Supernanny Team 23/04/2008

New research suggests that whether women give birth to a girl or a boy is highly dependent on their diet. Those of us who eat more around the time of conception are more likely to have boys, while the rest of us will probably be looking at a pink nursery…

The study, by the Universities of Exeter and Oxford , looked at 740 first time pregnant mothers, and suggest that women can influence the sex of their child through what they eat. More than half (56 percent) of the women put into a group for eating the most, gave birth to boys, compared with 45 percent of the group who had consumed the least. Women who had sons were also likely to have a wider variety of nutrients including potassium, calcium and vitamins C,E and B12, while women who had eaten breakfast cereals were also more likely to have sons!

The lead author of the paper, Dr Fiona Mathews of the University of Exeter’s School of Biosciences, said that the research may help to explain why in developed countries, where many young women choose to have low calorie diets, the proportion of boys born is falling. Over the last 40 years, there has been a small decline in the number of boys being born in industrialized countries such as the UK and USA.

“Our findings are particularly interesting given the recent debates within the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Committee about whether to regulate ‘gender’ clinics that allow parents to select offspring sex, by manipulating sperm, for non-medical reasons.

Here we have evidence of a ‘natural’ mechanism that means that women appear to be already controlling the sex of their offspring by their diet."

Although sex is genetically determined by fathers, this research suggests that mothers can influence the development of the sex of a child.

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