The Free Press Journal

Winter may be best time of year to conceive: Study

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Couples are most likely to start conceiving in September but it’s in late November and early December that they have the best chances of conceiving, say researcher­s. First-of-itskind study, accounts for when couples are most likely to start trying to conceive, finding couples conceive quicker in late fall and early winter.

“There are a lot of studies out there that look at seasonal patterns in births, but these studies don’t take into account when couples start trying, how long they take to conceive, or how long their pregnancie­s last,” said study lead author Amelia Wesselink from Boston University in the US.

“After accounting for seasonal patterns in when couples start trying to conceive, we found a decline in fecundabil­ity (Fecundabil­ity refers to the odds of conceiving within one menstrual cycle) in the late spring and a peak in the late fall,” Wesselink added.

The study used data on 14,331 pregnancy-planning women who had been trying to conceive for no more than six months, including 5,827 US and Canadian participan­ts in the BUSPH-based Pregnancy Study Online (PRESTO) and 8,504 Danish participan­ts in the Snart Gravid and Snart Foraeldre studies based at Aarhus University in Denmark.

The North Americans were more likely than Danes to begin trying to conceive in the fall. But, after taking those patterns into account, season affected fecundabil­ity for North Americans by 16 per cent, while Danes got only an eight per cent seasonal boost in the fall and dip in the spring.

In southern US states, the seasonal variation was even stronger, at 45 per cent, with a peak in quick conception­s in late November.

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