Daily Mail

How working night shifts could make it harder to conceive

- By Ben Spencer Medical Correspond­ent

WOMEN who work night shifts may find it harder to become pregnant, experts say.

Shift work and inconsiste­nt working patterns could be linked to lowered fertility, the study led by Harvard Medical School found.

The US researcher­s said women with physically demanding jobs that involve lots of heavy lifting may also struggle to conceive.

The scientists suspect this is linked to hormone levels which fluctuate according to the wake-sleep cycle and physical exertion. Scientists looked at 473 women, aged 35 on average, undergoing fertility treatment at Massachuse­tts General Hospital.

They found the number of ‘mature’ eggs – those capable of turning into a healthy embryo – was 24 per cent lower in those who regularly worked night shifts. And it was 14 per cent lower for women whose jobs involved heavy lifting.

Turning an ‘immature’ egg into a ‘mature’ egg is the natural action by which the body prepares an egg for ovulation. This reduction would not mean a woman could not conceive, but might mean it takes longer or may require IVF treatment.

Experts believe lifestyle factors such as not receiving enough sunlight or too much physical activity may interfere. The researcher­s, whose work is in journal Occupation­al And Environmen­tal Medicine, said their study was observatio­nal – so no firm conclusion­s can be drawn about cause and effect.

Professor Darren Griffin, of Kent University, warned the conclusion­s were ‘perhaps a little over-stated’ since the study had not directly examined the mechanisms at play.

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