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Smoke-Filled Wombs No Place for a Baby Boy

Tobacco use found to reduce births of males

By Ed Edelson
HealthScoutNews Reporter


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THURSDAY, April 18 (HealthScoutNews) -- Smoking is bad for boys, even before they're born, it seems.

A new study says parental smoking reduces the chance a boy will ever be born.

The boy-girl ratio was sharply skewed in favor of girls for parents who smoked around the time of conception, says a report in this week's issue of the journal The Lancet. The more the parents smoked, the less likely they were to have a bouncing baby boy.

Text Continues Below



The report comes from what might seem to be an unusual collaboration, involving scientists in Japan and Denmark. However, the teaming makes excellent sense, says Anne Grete Byskov, a professor of reproductive biology at the University Hospital of Copenhagen and a member of the research group.

The idea originated with Misao Fukuda, a Japanese researcher who has done research indicating that any kind of stress early in pregnancy reduces the ratio of baby boys. For example, he found a significant drop in the percentage of boys born to parents who lived through the massive 1995 earthquake in the Kobe region of Japan.

The well-organized Danes have a data collection system that allowed testing of Fukuda's hypothesis. The researchers recorded the sex of some 11,000 babies of women attending clinics in Denmark. Each mother was asked about whether she and the baby's father had smoked around the time of conception, and how much they had smoked -- "not at all," "less than a pack a day," "more than a pack a day."

Overall, the ratio of boys to girls was about even -- 1.043 boys to every one girl. However, for the nonsmoking parents, the ratio was 1.2 in favor of boys. That ratio dropped steadily with the smoking habit of either father or mother.

For example, the boy-girl ratio was 0.98 when the mother-to-be didn't smoke but the father smoked more than a pack a day. It was lowest when both parents smoked a lot -- they were 20 percent more likely to have a girl rather than a boy.

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Copyright © 2002 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Last updated 4/18/2002

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SOURCES: Anne Grete Byskov, professor, reproductive biology, University of Copenhagen, Denmark; Nancy S. Green, M.D., acting medical director, March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation, White Plains, N.Y.; April 20, 2002, Lancet


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