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How To Get Pregnant Faster: A Detailed 7-Step Plan

how to get pregnant fast

how to get pregnant fast

Planning a baby sounds like a lot of fun and no chore. After all, making babies comes as naturally to all living beings as breathing, eating, and sleeping. But while having sex with your partner is all nice and a lot of spice, conception may sometimes not be as quick as an orgasm.

Couples, especially women, sometimes go through copious amounts of stress in their effort to go the family way. In the current climate of increasing infertility, women become skeptical and stressed if they don’t conceive in a couple of months after having unprotected sex with their partner. Here’s an advice: hold you horses and wait for a year.

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1. Have Sex Closer To Ovulation

One of your ovaries releases an egg every month in a process called ovulation. It then travels to the fallopian tube where it fuses with the waiting sperm. This process is known as fertilization. It’s important to track your ovulation because you are fertile for only five days leading up to the day of ovulation and a day after. This is because while the sperm can live for a maximum of five days inside your body, your egg is available for fertilization only for 12 to 24 hours. So your fertile window is six days, with the day before ovulation showing the highest chance of conception.

Track Ovulation

Most ovulation calendars or calculators on the Internet will tell you that ovulation happens on the 14th day of a 28-day menstrual cycle, counting the first day of your last period as Day 1, or 14 days before your next period, irrespective of the cycle length. But this is rarely the case. More than 70 percent women are in their fertile window before day 10 or after day 17 of their menstrual cycle.1

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Whether you have a regular cycle or not, your foolproof bet is to look out for the following signs of ovulation in not your fertile window but what the American Pregnancy Association calls your fertile phase, i.e. Day 7 to Day 20:

They may not all appear together, but the first four are reliable indices. Usually, you ovulate within a day after you notice the highest amount of LH and the last day of egg white-like mucus. The temperature rise happens the day after ovulation. To calculate your day of ovulation, read: Scientific Way To Calculate Your Ovulation Day.

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Match Intercourse

It’s difficult to understand which day is the last day of the egg white-like mucus unless you have found a pattern by observing these signs for a few months so that you can somewhat predict your dates. To be on the safe side:

2. Try The Missionary And The Doggy Pose

There is little scientific evidence about what position exactly gets you pregnant fast. In fact, as long as the sperm is deposited inside your vagina, things should work. But anecdotal notes from couples with healthy babies give thumbs up to certain positions like

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Of course you don’t have to ditch your favorite positions and try only these, especially since there’s no documented research on these positions. But hey, it sure doesn’t hurt to try and see if there’s merit to these old wives’ tales.

As for the other much-believed theory that women should keep lying down after intercourse to help the sperm stay put, again, has no real research data, but staying this way and snuggling into your partner’s arms or doing some pillow talk post a vigorous round of intercourse never hurt anyone, right?

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3. Avoid Aspirins And Steroids

There are certain medicines that can affect the chances of conceiving and their adverse effect is not limited to women. As a woman, if you are having any of the following medicines, you need to check with your doctor before trying to conceive.2

If your partner is taking the following medicines:3 4 5

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There are other medications, too that could affect or delay pregnancy. Check with your doctor if you are on medication.6

4. Quit Smoking, Boozing, And Overdosing On Caffeine

Late nights coupled with binge drinking sessions are no friends of baby making. Studies have linked alcohol intake to decreased chances of conception in women. A study on 430 Danish couples in the age group of 20–35 years trying to conceive for the first time found that in the 6 cycles of follow up, 64 percent women (179) with a weekly alcohol intake of fewer than 5 drinks and only 55 percent (75) women with a higher intake could conceive.7

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The researchers came to the conclusion that the more a woman drinks alcohol, the less her probability of conceiving, even when she is having sex during the fertile window of the month.

Even if you have a weekly alcohol intake of five or fewer drinks, you are sort of sabotaging your baby-making efforts. And however hard it is, keep the wine glasses and the shot glasses away from yourself and your partner.

Yes, your partner too. He can continue to enjoy a couple of drinks per week but not more if he doesn’t want to compromise on semen quality.8 Heavy drinking increases the amount of free testosterone in blood, which can lead to problems in semen volume and sperm density.9 Excessive consumption can even lead to reduced sex drive and sexual performance.

But don’t make up for all your lost alcohol with endless cups of coffee either. The caffeine in coffee, tea, soft drinks, and chocolate may prolong the time to pregnancy, according to the Fertility Society of Australia. Limit your caffeine intake to 1–2 cups of coffee a day.

Smoking, which is bad for health at all times, is especially bad for conception, and both you and your partner should quit smoking when hoping for a visit from the stork.10

5. Eat The Right Foods For Female Fertility

You are welcome to try the exotic aphrodisiacs like oysters and Chinese ginseng but not at the cost of mainstream healthy foods that contain the right carbs, protein, good fats, and the essential vitamins and minerals. Eat lots of veggies and fruits to aid your reproductive system to function well. A comprehensive examination of diet and fertility in an eight-year study of more than 18,000 women found these 8 things that improve fertility in women:11

  1. Unsaturated vegetable oils found in nuts and seeds like walnuts, almonds, olive oil, and avocado oil to help improve the body’s sensitivity to insulin and heal inflammation, both factors being important for fertility
  2. Oily fish like salmon and sardines—just make sure you are buying from a good place as stale fish leads to health complications
  3. Vegetable proteins such as beans, peas, and nuts
  4. Carbs like whole grains, vegetables, and whole fruits that are slowly digested
  5. Whole milk and full-fat yogurt, not skimmed milk
  6. Multivitamins to get some extra folic acid, about 400 micrograms a day
  7. Plant irons like whole grain cereals, pumpkin, spinach, tomatoes, and beetroot
  8. Water in sufficient quantity

Avoid high-sugar, high-calorie processed foods that have trans-fats, which clog arteries, harm heart health, and also threaten fertility.

That apart, maintain normal weight and a BMI of 20–24. Being overweight can interrupt menstrual cycles and affect ovulation. And for that, stay physically active and try to get enough exercise. A brisk walk in the fresh air is always good for your system and also helps you stay stress- free.

6. Get The Right Nutrients For Sperm Health

Fertility is a lot about female health, but it’s not just a woman’s thing. Men need to have a healthy diet as well to increase chances of conception. Some of the nutrients that improve semen production and quality in men are:

Your partner should avoid soybean as studies have indicated that a compound called genistein, found in all soy-based foods like soy milk, tofu, and edamame, slows down or even destroys human sperm.12

7. Share Your Medical History With Your Gynecologist

Last but not the least, share your medical history with your gynecologist, informing him/her about any medications you may be taking for high blood pressure, diabetes, PCOS, thyroid, or any other health problems; previous pregnancies and/or miscarriage (if any); and your dietary intake and lifestyle habits. Being on the same page with your gynaecologist is as imperative for your conception as eating healthy and tracking ovulation.

Now that you know all the guidelines for hassle-free conception and have checked all the boxes, wait for the “good news.” Your journey to parenthood is about to begin. All the best for the roller-coaster ride.

References[+]

References
1 Wilcox, Allen J., David Dunson, and Donna Day Baird. “The timing of the “fertile window” in the menstrual cycle: day specific estimates from a prospective study.” Bmj 321, no. 7271 (2000): 1259-1262.
2 Infertility-Causes. NHS Choices.
3, 6 Nudell, David M., Mara M. Monoski, and Larry I. Lipshultz. “Common medications and drugs: how they affect male fertility.” Urologic Clinics of North America 29, no. 4 (2002): 965-973.
4 Sigman, Mark. “Medications that impair male fertility.” (2007): 11-16.
5 R Brezina, Paul, Fahd N Yunus, and Yulian Zhao. “Effects of pharmaceutical medications on male fertility.” Journal of reproduction & infertility 13, no. 1 (2012): 3-11.
7 Jensen, Tina Kold, Niels Henrik I. Hjollund, Tine Brink Henriksen, Thomas Scheike, Henrik Kolstad, Aleksander Giwercman, Erik Ernst, Jens Peter Bonde, and Niels E. Skakkebæk. “Does moderate alcohol consumption affect fertility? Follow up study among couples planning first pregnancy.” Bmj 317, no. 7157 (1998): 505-510.
8 Jensen, Tina Kold, Mads Gottschau, Jens Otto Broby Madsen, Anne-Maria Andersson, Tina Harmer Lassen, Niels E. Skakkebæk, Shanna H. Swan, Lærke Priskorn, Anders Juul, and Niels Jørgensen. “Habitual alcohol consumption associated with reduced semen quality and changes in reproductive hormones; a cross-sectional study among 1221 young Danish men.” BMJ open 4, no. 9 (2014): e005462.
9 Nudell, David M., Mara M. Monoski, and Larry I. Lipshultz. “Common medications and drugs: how they affect male fertility.” Urologic Clinics of North America 29, no. 4 (2002): 965-973.
10 Effects of caffeine, alcohol and smoking on fertility.The Fertility Society of Australia.
11 Chavarro, Jorge, Walter Willett, and Patrick Skerrett. The Fertility Diet: Groundbreaking research reveals natural ways to boost ovulation and improve your chances of getting pregnant. McGraw Hill Professional, 2009.
12 Chavarro, Jorge E., Thomas L. Toth, Sonita M. Sadio, and Russ Hauser. “Soy food and isoflavone intake in relation to semen quality parameters among men from an infertility clinic.” Human reproduction 23, no. 11 (2008): 2584-2590.
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