Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,152,129 members, 7,814,944 topics. Date: Thursday, 02 May 2024 at 01:05 AM

Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? - Romance - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Romance / Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? (948 Views)

Walking Barefoot May Increase The Size Of Your Penis / Men Beware Long Sex May Kill You / 'Lack Of Sex Will Make You Mad' - Nigerian "Slay Queen" (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by oneafric: 9:30am On May 10, 2017
A study shows that number of sex partners and the quantity of sex may be directly related to a woman's improved fertility, particularly in women with fertility problems or suffering from some form of infertility. The study showed that infertile or semi-fertile women with more combined sex partners and total sexual encounters had more children than those with less partners and less sexual encounters.

Read the details of the study here
Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by MysteriousAnn(f): 9:35am On May 10, 2017
Bottom line if you're infertile you should turn yourself into a slut? Iranu post.

7 Likes

Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by tripplephi: 9:39am On May 10, 2017
statistics have shown that once you begin a sentence with A RECENT STUDY SHOWS that 90% of people will believe it without research or further study. Mr OP... THIS YOUR THREAD IS A LIE. THIS IS WHAT YOU WANT US TO CLICK LINK FOR TRAFFIC abi?

::::::::::::::::::::::::
Infertility -Why women should not delay sex: Discussing Findings from a study By ifeanyia (M)May 09, 2017, 12:11:56 AM
Disclaimer: The content of this article is for information purposes only. It is not an endorsement or condemnation of any particular lifestyle. It is a semi-academic exercise geared towards examining things that have been ignored by researchers for years. The aim is to raise curiosity about the matter, and hopefully, attract the attention of a well-funded researcher.

Important Disclosure: We work with affiliate companies and will get compensated if the included links are clicked SHEY I SAID IT IS LINK U WANT US TO CLICK BUT U DENIED...... oneafric LIAR



Introduction

This article argues that a woman should start having sex on a regular basis after the age of 18 years to be relatively more fertile for the rest of her reproductive life. The rationale behind this opinion will be presented here.

The author of this article has observed carefully over the years that, women who are “more outgoing” or sexually active during the years preceding marriage or settling down, ended up having more children, or conceived faster in later years when they got married, than their reserved counterparts.
This observation is contrary to popular opinion about the matter. The conventional opinion is that women should be reserved in order not to endanger their ability to conceive when they want to, usually during the years of marriage. As a result, and in this conventional belief, men still seek out virgins or semi-virgins to marry, with the belief that they would be more fertile; not be “damaged goods”; or unable to produce children.

What inspired this mini-research is that the author observed the direct opposite in society; the author observed that all the women who were outgoing, or who could not be considered reserved by any stretch, ended up having children very easily, and even having healthier children than the reserved women. The health of the children will not be discussed in this article though; that will be for another study.

The Survey Design

The snap survey was conducted online using a well established and reputable survey company, Survey Monkey. This survey can only be considered “snap” or preliminary because of the relatively small size of the sample, or the number of women interviewed. The survey sampled out and interviewed one hundred and thirty-three (133) women, and was conducted in one country, the United States. Nevertheless, the sampling was very scientific, and some facts from the survey results proved too powerful to ignore, even in its limited state.

The survey was conducted among women between the ages of 18 and 64 years who had to answer questions about their general sex lives, the number of children they had, the cumulative number of sexual partners they'd had, and the quantity of sex they'd had; all to make findings relating to their fertility measured by success in having at least one child. To get as much honest answer as possible, the survey questions were designed to mask the true intentions of the survey. This strategy was necessitated by the fact that women generally tend to be very sensitive and private about their sex lives.



The Findings

The first finding is that, on average, all the women who had regular sex had at least one child per capita. This finding is consistent with many other studies before it, one of which advises women not to wait until “ovulation window” to have sex if they want to get pregnant.

Secondly, in this study, it was found that women who had more than one cumulative sexual partners had slightly more children, or conceived faster than the women who had one or fewer partners in the same period under review.

The third and most significant finding is that, among sexually active women who had fertility problems or some form of infertility, 50% of them were able to have a child, while 50% did not. Out of the sexually active women with fertility problems who succeeded in having a child, 71% of them had more than one cumulative sexual partners up to the day of the survey. Furthermore, it was found that, of the sexually active infertile women who had 2 children, 80% of them had at least 2 cumulative sexual partners.

The statistics further indicates that the infertile multiple-partner women who had 2 children each had 7.5 cumulative partners, and 105 sexual encounters. This is consistent with the finding that in the one case of an infertile woman who got pregnant, but who had been with only one man, she had 100 sexual encounters with the man. The other infertile woman who had a child with only one man and 2 sexual encounters, had a child at the age of 18. The first woman that had a child with one man and 100 encounters, disvirgined at the age of 21 and had her child at 31. While the second woman with only one male partner and one child disvirgined at the age of 16 and got pregnant at 18. Both women did not stop having sex after their first sexual encounters (disvirginity).

Conversely, of the infertile women who could not have a child, each had an averaged total of 1.85 cumulative sexual partners and 34.85 sexual encounters.

The simplified breakdown of the findings are as follows:

(a) The infertile woman who had a child while having been with one man started to have sex very early -at sixteen and had a child at 18.

(b) The other infertile woman who had only one sexual partner, and had a child at 31 years of age, had her first sexual encounter at 21; therefore she had unbroken sex for ten years.

(c) 80% of the infertile women who had at least two or more sexual partners, and 105 sexual encounters, had the most number of children -2 each.

(d) On average, all the infertile women who had at least one child had very high number of sexual partners and encounters compared to their reserved or near-celibate counterparts.

(f) All the infertile women who did not have a child had comparatively low sexual encounters and partners.


These findings are self-evident and support the original observation made prior to the beginning of this study.



Conclusion and Discussion

The average age of a woman's Menarche; which is the age of onset of menstruation is 13 years, with variations existing in different parts of the world. At the first year of Menarche, 80% of a woman's menstruation is anovulatory (menstruation without ovulation). It decreases to 50% after three years of Menarche. The percentage of anovulation decreases further to 10% by the sixth year of Menarche. This means that at around 19 years of age, all women -regardless of predisposition to the development of symptoms of infertility later in life- are largely the same. They all start at the same base. Therefore, at full reproductive maturity, which is around 19 years, all women could theoretically get pregnant.

A combination of sociological, cultural, and religious evolution factors created a new phenomenon which manifests in increasing infertility among women of childbearing age. Though there are parts of the world -mainly rural parts -where female fertility has remained the same, other more urbanised parts are experiencing an increase in cases of infertility. The main socioeconomic change that is prominent in most of these cases is the fact that women are taking more time to start trying to get pregnant. More women are marrying late, and the ones that marry late are still delaying childbirth for professional and career reasons.

Three main reproductive problems dominate the field of female infertility today, and they are Fibroid tumours, Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS), and Ovarian cysts.
Other health reproductive health problems still exist, but they are either natural occurrences like endometriosis or ones caused by STDs which may block the fallopian tubes. Outside of these two later cases, and discounting male factor, most female infertility are caused by Fibroids, PCOS, or Ovarian cysts. These are very challenging fertility problems for which only specialised solutions exist.

Available information from open sources indicates that these three fertility problems start to manifest fully in women at “preferred time of settling down”, which is now trending above 30 years of age. Most women never know they have these problems until they are settled and want to have children. Some women remain virgins or near virgins till that time. The problems develop due to the natural evolution of a woman's reproductive system. However, as discovered in this study, a woman can theoretically beat this cycle by maintaining an unbroken sex life from preferably the peak of her reproductive cycle which is usually around 19 years, till whenever she wants to get pregnant.

This opinion is nuanced as much as possible to avoid the usual hubris associated with predictive science. Therefore, it is only one opinion which the reader is advised to treat as such. It is recommended here that if having a child is critically important to a woman, she should -upon attainment of adulthood, which is 18 years of age – either get married if possible or retain a boyfriend till she is ready to settle down. How a woman does that in this age of STDs and other social dysfunctions in society is not one that can be speculated here.


Ifeanyi Azubu
VERY UNREALISTIC APPROACH AND IT DOES NOT WORK.

2 Likes

Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by oneafric: 9:41am On May 10, 2017
The article also states that all women stand almost equal chance of getting pregnant at around 18 years.
Things start to change after that age.
Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by oneafric: 9:42am On May 10, 2017
tripplephi:
statistics have shown that once you begin a sentence with [b]A RECENT STUDY SHOWS...[/b]that 90% of people will believe it without research or further study. Mr OP... THIS YOUR THREAD IS A LIE.

Did you read the study?
I would read it first before debating...
Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by Kposkila: 9:45am On May 10, 2017
MysteriousAnn:
Bottom line if you're infertile you should turn yourself into a slut? Iranu post.
Thumbs up ma lady, ur mama born u well...
Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by oneafric: 9:46am On May 10, 2017
MysteriousAnn:
Bottom line if you're infertile you should turn yourself into a slut? Iranu post.
No, it simply means that if you are infertile, and have had a very robust sex life prior to trying to get pregnant, you stand a better chance of conception than another infertile woman who had been reserved prior.
Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by Elkay3: 9:47am On May 10, 2017
Studies are very much diverse, sometimes directly contradicting another.
This, doesn't seems much of a study either.
Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by oneafric: 9:49am On May 10, 2017
Elkay3:
Studies are very much diverse, sometimes directly contradicting another.
This, doesn't seems much of a study either.

Why do you say so?
The characters that answered the survey questions are not women?
Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by tripplephi: 9:56am On May 10, 2017
YOU ARE JUST HEAR TO PROMOTE YOUR LINK.... gerrarahia


oneafric:


Did you read the study?
I would read it first before debating...
Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by oneafric: 9:59am On May 10, 2017
tripplephi:
YOU ARE JUST HEAR TO PROMOTE YOUR LINK.... gerrarahia

Are you an intellectual or a troll?
An intellectual discusses issues raised, while a troll, well... trolls.

BTW did you even read the study? It is too long to post here, so only people who are really intellectual, i.e. people who love to seek information and to become wiser for it would bother to go there.
Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by tripplephi: 10:02am On May 10, 2017
bros, i can copy and paste it here and kill your entire LINK... so just stop blabbing... am intelligent to know that STUDIES CONTRADICT. ok?


oneafric:


Are you an intellectual or a troll?
An intellectual discusses issues raised, while a troll, well... trolls.

BTW did you even read the study? It is too long to post here, so only people who are really intellectual, i.e. people who love to seek information and to become wiser for it would bother to go there.
Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by oneafric: 10:05am On May 10, 2017
tripplephi:
bros, i can copy and paste it here and kill your entire LINK... so just stop blabbing... am intelligent to know that STUDIES CONTRADICT. ok?



So, discuss the contradictions. Punch holes in the facts presented. That is what an intellectual does.
Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by oneafric: 10:07am On May 10, 2017
BTW tripplephi you can post the whole thing here.
Ain't no beef about that bro. grin
Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by oneafric: 10:22am On May 10, 2017
@tripplephi

Thanks for posting it.
But you didn't have to troll it by adding your BOLD Opinion at the bottom.
That is what trolls do.

BTW I'm still waiting for your intellectual opinion WHY "It doesn't work".
Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by Headlesschicken(m): 10:42am On May 10, 2017
undecided RUBBISH...
Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by Lionessza(f): 10:58am On May 10, 2017
Weird. Why not have the quantity of sex with one person, why the need to screw around to be fertile? . This so called researcher is up to something grin
Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by oneafric: 2:20pm On May 10, 2017
Lionessza:
Weird. Why not have the quantity of sex with one person, why the need to screw around to be fertile? . This so called researcher is up to something grin

But the result of the survey was showing that either of the two had the same effect. Did you read the data up there?
If anything, I believe the result was showing that women should not delay having babies past the age of say 18 to 21, else those of them with latent fertility issues start to manifest them in later years. But it appears that those of them that did not abstain after 18 had relatively higher chance of conceiving than others.
Re: Number Of Sex Partners And The Quantity Of Sex May Increase Women's Fertility? by oneafric: 2:55pm On May 10, 2017
Here's my main take on this issue.

The article is about a woman's bottom-line chance for fertility.

(1) The most prominent finding is about infertile women, therefore if you are fertile through your family line, you have nothing to worry about.

(2) If infertility runs in your family (things like PCOS runs in family), and having a child is critically important to you, then you should at least marry or get a baby by 18. Else, maintain a regular sex life till you are ready to have a baby.

(3) Women with fertility problems will increase in number due to women delaying childbirth till later years; this is indisputable.

(4) If you are a man reading this, try to snag your girl at 18. That is how she likely beats childlessness.

(5) Hoping to get a baby through technology like IVF should be an absolute last choice, not a first choice because of the times we live in.


BTW I read somewhere that current Nigerian youths hate intellectual work. And the person was asking how these youths can run a sophisticated economy in the 21st century. I hope that some submissions I've read here does not prove this true.

(1) (Reply)

What Is It With Ladies And Pride / Whatever You Do People Will Always Come Up With Criticisms.photo / Islam And Sex

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 84
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.