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Recent research published online in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences has identified an interesting correlation between maternal diet and the ability of parents to be able to have a hand in selecting the gender of their baby.

Studies completed at St Mary’s Hospital at Portsmouth in the south of England have shown a substantial link between increased nutrient intake before and in the early weeks of pregnancy, and the prevalence of male babies. Scientists from the Universities of Exeter and Oxford have examined the eating habits of 740 women, using questionnaires to determine their usual dietary intake before pregnancy and accurate food diaries to keep track of the women’s dietary intake during the first 28 weeks of gestation.

The women were all in their first pregnancy, avoiding potential skewing of the results due to previous childbirth, which has been shown to also have an effect on offspring gender. The women also had no known medical problems (including obesity) and the random sample also included a proportion of smokers equivalent to the proportion of smokers in the general community.

Results from the study showed that women with a higher nutritional intake before pregnancy and in the early weeks, in particular those who enjoyed cereal for breakfast every day, were more likely to have a boy. Girls were born to women with a lower nutritional intake, especially those who tended to skip breakfast.

The study also showed that there was no determinable correlation between a baby’s gender and socio-demographic situation, anthropometric characteristics, smoking status, caffeine intake or Body Mass Index (the ratio of weight and height often used to determine a person’s body fat and obesity value).

One possible reason for these results is the link between glucose levels in the body and foetal sex. It’s well documented that missing out on breakfast extends the usual period of night time fasting, naturally depressing glucose levels in the body. Previous studies have shown that that decreased glucose in the mother’s body enhances the chance of producing female offspring. The more glucose, the better chance of having a boy. It’s unknown why this is the case.

It’s also been shown that in times of hardship, when nutritional food has been tougher to come by, there has been a prevalence of females being born. This is likely due to the fact that female babies are smaller and lighter (on average) than male babies, meaning that the maternal body needs less nutrients to sustain an unborn girl than a boy. It’s well documented that in times when food is harder to obtain, more girls are born than boys.

Funnily enough, over the past few decades there has been a slow but steady increase in the number of girl births in relation to births of boys, which are declining. This is likely due to the change in eating habits in the developed world, which tend to be less nutrient rich than in decades past. There is also a habit, especially in young women, of missing breakfast which ties in with the slight rise in female births.

It’s an interesting thought that we might finally be getting to a stage in our development where we can actually have a say in the gender of our offspring and that by eating cereal for breakfast every day you can raise your chances of having a boy.

"If a mother has plentiful resources then it can make sense to invest in producing a son because he is likely to produce more grandchildren than would a daughter. However, in leaner times having a daughter is a safer bet," stated Dr Fiona Mathews, co-author of the study and member of the School of Biosciences at Exeter University, England.

To read the report in detail, click here.
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June 13th 2007 01:01
Wow!
Time flies when you’re having fun, doesn’t it.

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Let me introduce you to ...

May 28th 2007 07:35
... the newest member of our household.

Meet Mackensie Claire; born 24th May 2007 at 7.55am


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Bring it on!

May 22nd 2007 04:04
Well here we are; May 22nd. And can you remember, boys and girls, the ultimate significance of that monumental date?

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I once read somewhere that giving birth can be a bittersweet experience for new mothers. As you say hello and welcome to the beautiful little person you have helped to create, you also have to say goodbye to and mourn the tiny person who has been lost to you forever.

Your little girl is lying in your arms, feeding from your breast, giving you joy with every breath she takes but in the deep dark of the night you remember the little boy who never was. The little boy who died a secret and peaceful death at the precise moment your little girl came into the world


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Like father like son

May 8th 2007 04:47
I had another ante-natal appointment yesterday, up at the hospital. It seems like my whole life revolves around that place at the moment. The receptionist knows my face instantly and greets me like an old friend, and one of the doctors told me off last week … the sort of dressing down you’d expect from your mother … for not having my labour bag packed ready for the hospital.

I felt suitably chastened as she waggled her finger in my face and admonished me with stories of how my baby could be born at any time now and that I needed to pack my bag … immediately


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Well, I finally reached it. At thirty seven weeks pregnant the birth of my baby could happen at any time and be considered a normal labour occurring at term.

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What goes around, comes around …

April 27th 2007 06:10
… Or Divine Retribution.

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Girl? boy? or ... something else?

April 22nd 2007 01:51
I was busy on the internet the other day, doing extensive research on an important and vital subject …

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