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22nd July 2019
03:00pm BST

The reasons given included: it’s ‘unfair on the child to have old parents’; increased health complications; and the fact that, apparently, it’s ‘unnatural’.The poll of 2019 women was conducted by the Private Pregnancy UK Show, which is calling for the Government to do more about educating women about ‘leaving it too late’. The research was conducted with the intention of kicking off a debate on age limits for medical intervention and assisted fertility. But it also called for greater fertility awareness for adult women, and for sex education to include information on fertility options.
The numbers of women over 40 having babies have doubled in the past twenty years – this is down to careers, the cost of childcare and homes, failure to meet The One any sooner and advances in fertility treatments.
But many believe it is more important than ever to educate women about their fertility – and the options you have should a pregnancy not happen naturally.
"There isn’t enough education available to women, many of whom still believe they can go on forever," said Dr Amin Gorgy, fertility consultant and IVF specialist at the Fertility and Gynaecology Academy.
Depressingly, a woman’s fertility potential declines rapidly after the age of 35 and drops even faster after the age of 40. "The ideal age for women to become pregnant is in their twenties and early thirties," said Dr Gorgy. "Theoretically, through egg donation and using eggs frozen at an earlier age, women can conceive at any age – in fact, the receptivity of the womb for implanting embryos declines only after the age of 54. But usually we take 50 as the age limit for assisted conception. Only under special circumstances will we consider someone beyond the age of 50."