Studies exhibit to that tobacco smo...
Studies exhibit to that tobacco smoke impairs women's ability to conceive and cut shorts sperm count in men, and uniform second-hand smoke can prove damaging to fertility. Dr Michael husk and his research team reported in Fertility and Sterility that of the above 14,000 pregnancies looked at in the thought women exposed to smoke were about 15 percent les likely to conceive within the period of a year as those in smoke-free atmospheres. In light of this, Dr peel and his colleagues concluded that in ties where the woman is pregnant and in those trying to conceive, smoking by the agency of either partner is dangerous. COPYRIGHT 2000 PRIMEDIA Intertec, a PRIMEDIA Company. All Rights Reserved COPYRIGHT 2001 Gale Group
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