Publication | Open Access
Effects of age, cigarette smoking, and other factors on fertility: findings in a large prospective study.
268
Citations
15
References
1985
Year
Family MedicineContraceptive UseLarge Prospective StudyFertilityTeenage PregnancyOral ContraceptiveReproductive HealthContraceptive DiscontinuationGynecologyOther FactorsFamily PlanningReproductive EpidemiologyTobacco ControlContraceptionPublic HealthSexual And Reproductive HealthPregnancy PreventionCigarette SmokingInfertilityTobacco UseProductive AgingSocial ClassContraception 10.7Maternal HealthFertility PolicyFertility TrackingBirth Control MethodContraceptive UptakeDemographyMedicineWomen's Health
Of 17 032 women taking part in the Oxford Family Planning Association contraceptive study, 4104 stopped using a birth control method to plan a pregnancy on a total of 6199 occasions. The influence of various factors on fertility in these women was assessed by measuring the time taken to give birth to a child. An appreciable inverse relation was observed between age at stopping contraception and fertility both in nulliparous and parous women, but the effect was much greater in the nulliparous women. The most important finding was a consistent and highly significant trend of decreasing fertility with increasing numbers of cigarettes smoked per day; it was estimated that five years after stopping contraception 10.7% of smokers smoking more than 20 cigarettes a day, but only 5.4% of non-smokers, remained undelivered. Some relation was found between fertility and social class, age at marriage, and a history of gynaecological disease, but weight, height, and Quetelet's index were without noticeable effect.
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