Doncaster

Fertility

Smoking can have an effect on both Male and Female fertility. The more and longer you smoke the greater that effect will be.

Supporting image for Fertility

Video - How Smoking can affect fertility

Male fertility

In men, many toxins found in a cigarette can affect both semen and sperm. Men who smoke also tend to have a lower sperm count than non-smokers and have more malformed sperm with reduced motility. This can make becoming a dad difficult and may also put the foetus at risk of developing because of damaged genetic material. Researchers have found that there is no safe level of smoking; even light or occasional smoking is associated with reduced male fertility.

Stopping smoking can;

  • Improve volume of ejaculation
  • Improve sperm count
  • Decrease the risk of abnormal sperm shape
  • Improve the outcome of fertility treatment such as IVF/ICSCI

Female fertility

Smoking can decrease the chance of conceiving a baby by 10-40% each menstrual cycle. The more and longer a woman smokes, the longer it will take her to conceive. Some of the toxins found in cigarettes can harm the ovaries, where eggs are produced as well as the fallopian tubes that carry the fertilized egg to the uterus.

Stopping smoking can;

  • Increase the chances of getting pregnant
  • Reduce the risk of becoming infertile
  • Improve the outcome of fertility treatment e.g. IVF/ICSI
  • Reduce the risk of miscarriage, stillbirth, ectopic pregnancy, low birth weight and premature birth.

Arrange a call with one of our advisors

Call 0800 612 0011 (free from a landline) or 0330 660 1166 Monday to Friday between 8.30am and 4.30pm and Saturdays between 9am until 4.30pm

telephone

Please let us know when will be most convenient for us to call and we will try and accommodate you. Please note we can only call back within our opening hours and we can only try calling 3 times. So if you don't hear from us within a week please either call us or complete this form again.