Close Menu
Healthtost
  • News
  • Mental Health
  • Men’s Health
  • Women’s Health
  • Skin Care
  • Sexual Health
  • Pregnancy
  • Nutrition
  • Fitness
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

Climate justice is reproductive justice

July 2, 2026

Plant-based diets offer heart benefits but may require supplementation

July 2, 2026

A Promising New Painless Home Treatment – SkinCare Physicians

July 2, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Healthtost
SUBSCRIBE
  • News

    Plant-based diets offer heart benefits but may require supplementation

    July 2, 2026

    LEF1 and niche-derived factors regulate T cell stemness in chronic diseases

    July 1, 2026

    Obesity may account for up to one in four cases of polypharmacy

    July 1, 2026

    The trial evaluates interdisciplinary care for veterans with brain injury and PTSD

    June 30, 2026

    The fiber blend relieves constipation and improves stool consistency

    June 30, 2026
  • Mental Health

    What happens in your blood when you are stressed? We put it to the test

    June 28, 2026

    Why negative news grabs our attention and what it means for our mental health

    June 25, 2026

    Everyone wants to think they’re open-minded – here’s why most people aren’t

    June 24, 2026

    five tips from influential thinkers to calm your nerves

    June 19, 2026

    10 Ways to Find Your Purpose as a Married Woman

    June 17, 2026
  • Men’s Health

    Genetics play a bigger role than pregnancy in childhood obesity risk

    July 1, 2026

    A link between e-cigarettes and oral cancer

    July 1, 2026

    James Michener, My Father and Me: Finding Our Place in the World and Embracing the Mysteries of Life

    June 30, 2026

    Welcome (Back) to MDA! Start here.

    June 29, 2026

    10 irrational thought patterns that increase anxiety

    June 28, 2026
  • Women’s Health

    Why is my sinus breaking? Causes of Pelvic Floor Contractions – Vuvatech

    July 1, 2026

    Benefits of choline during pregnancy | The Wellness Blog

    June 30, 2026

    How Victoria eliminated her hip pain in just 10 weeks

    June 30, 2026

    Understanding the causes of thinning female hair

    June 29, 2026

    Kimchi can flush microplastics out of the body, thanks to this probiotic

    June 28, 2026
  • Skin Care

    A Promising New Painless Home Treatment – SkinCare Physicians

    July 2, 2026

    The Best Skin Care Products for Men, According to a Celebrity Facialist

    July 1, 2026

    Sunscreen mistakes that could leave your sensitive skin unprotected

    June 30, 2026

    Body Smooth | The body scrub that started it all – Tropic Skincare

    June 29, 2026

    Congested vs. Inflammatory Acne: How to Tell the Difference

    June 26, 2026
  • Sexual Health

    Climate justice is reproductive justice

    July 2, 2026

    5 STDs that can cause bruising

    July 2, 2026

    Complete Guide to 2026 — Sexual Health Alliance

    June 30, 2026

    Five things you need to know about herpes

    June 28, 2026

    Fildena 120 Best Time To Take

    June 26, 2026
  • Pregnancy

    Yoga, Pregnancy, Motherhood and Connection

    July 2, 2026

    Yoga poses for expectant mothers

    June 28, 2026

    Not too much, not too little: Finding the gold of vitamins and minerals

    June 27, 2026

    Clean Beauty Myths A dermatologist wants every mom to stop believing

    June 26, 2026

    “Is it a boy or a girl?” Old Wives’ Tales Gender Prediction Summary

    June 23, 2026
  • Nutrition

    5 easy tips + a kid-approved menu

    July 1, 2026

    Healthy Raspberry Lemon Snack Loaf

    June 30, 2026

    Raspberry Ginger Lime Detox Water

    June 29, 2026

    6 Lunch Recipes in 10 Minutes – JSHealth

    June 28, 2026

    Benefits of seeds: Exploring nutritional powerhouses

    June 27, 2026
  • Fitness

    6.26 Friday Faves – The Fitnessista

    June 30, 2026

    9 Useful Fitness Tips for an Unmotivated Person

    June 29, 2026

    Is your body stuck in a state of stress? Here’s what you need to know

    June 28, 2026

    Summer strength training program for beginners

    June 27, 2026

    fitness benefits for both of you

    June 26, 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
Healthtost
Home»Pregnancy»A new study says pre-pregnancy health is a conversation between two parents
Pregnancy

A new study says pre-pregnancy health is a conversation between two parents

healthtostBy healthtostMarch 29, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
A New Study Says Pre Pregnancy Health Is A Conversation Between
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

For the second time in a week, research has been released focusing on dad’s health as a contributing factor to pregnancy success, and we love it. When people talk about preparing for pregnancy, the advice usually falls on moms. Eat better. Take your vitamins. Cut back on caffeine. Book the appointment. Make lifestyle changes. Fathers are often treated as a supporting character in a story framed almost entirely around the mother’s health. But a new study published in *Human Reproduction* is a reminder that this view can be too narrow. The researchers found that eating more highly processed foods during conception was associated with different concerns for women and men. In females, it was associated with slightly shorter early embryo development and smaller yolk sac size. In men, it was associated with reduced fertility and a higher risk of infertility.

This finding seems particularly important because highly processed foods are not an unusual part of modern life. They are often the most convenient foods at home. Packaged snacks, frozen meals, sugary cereals, processed meats, soft drinks and foods that fit busy family schedules. According to the additional text provided with the study, these foods now account for 50 to 60 percent of daily food intake in some high-income countries.

That’s part of what makes this research land. This is not a specialized obsession with health or an unrealistic standard of “perfect” nutrition. It’s about the foods many people rely on when life is hectic, money is tight, and time is short. For couples trying to conceive, this makes the study feel less abstract and more like a reflection of real life.

Researchers looked at 831 female and 651 male partners enrolled in a long-term prospective study in the Netherlands. They assessed the parents’ diets during early pregnancy, around 12 weeks, and calculated how much of each person’s total intake came from highly processed foods. The average intake of ultra-processed food was 22 percent for women and 25 percent for men. They also collected information on time to pregnancy, fertility, which is the chance of conceiving within a month, and infertility, defined as taking 12 months or more to conceive or using assisted reproductive technology.

In addition, the researchers used transvaginal ultrasound to measure crown-tip length, which is a standard way of monitoring fetal size and growth, along with yolk volume at seven, nine and 11 weeks’ gestation.

The findings were not the same for women and men. In women, higher intake of ultra-processed foods was not consistently associated with gestational age or infertility, but was associated with slightly shorter fetal growth and smaller yolk sac size by the seventh week of pregnancy. The study authors said these differences were small but still important from a research and population health perspective.

This may sound very technical, but these early readings are important because they can provide clues about how the pregnancy is progressing in its early stages. The publication notes that impaired first-trimester fetal growth has previously been associated with preterm birth, low birth weight, and an adverse cardiovascular profile in childhood. He also notes that impaired yolk sac development has been associated with an increased risk of miscarriage and preterm birth.

This is not to say that a few convenience meals will cause harm or that a person’s diet determines the outcome. It means researchers are paying attention to early developmental markers because they may help explain how health before and around conception shapes what happens next.

For men, the findings pointed in a different direction. Higher intake of highly processed food was associated with higher risk of infertility and longer time to pregnancy. The researchers suggested that sperm may be particularly sensitive to nutritional composition, which could explain why paternal nutrition appeared more strongly in fertility outcomes than in fetal development itself.

This point is important, and frankly, overdue. Discussions about fertility and pregnancy still tend to put the blame almost entirely on women. This study brings this idea back to life. The authors said their findings highlight the need to pay more attention to men’s health in the preconception period, which has traditionally been ignored, and move away from the assumption that only maternal health and lifestyle matters for pregnancy and offspring outcomes.

This also fits with another study we covered last week, more broadly on men’s health before pregnancy. In this review, researchers argued that fathers’ preconception health can influence pregnancy outcomes, child development, and family well-being, and that healthy family building should not fall solely on mothers. Growing evidence suggests that fathers’ mental health, age, substance use and overall well-being also matter. Overall, the message is becoming harder to ignore: pre-pregnancy health is not just a woman’s business.

This change matters because it changes the tone of the conversation. Instead of treating pregnancy preparation as a list given to women, she reframes it as something shared. This does not erase the reality of pregnancy occurring in a person’s body, but recognizes that the path to pregnancy and the health of a future child are affected by both parents.

At the same time, some perspective is needed here. The study on highly processed foods was observational, meaning it found associations, not proof of cause and effect. The authors were clear about this. They said the research cannot prove direct causes of ultra-processed food intake on fertility or early fetal development, and more work is needed to replicate the findings in more diverse populations and better understand the biology behind them.

They also raised an important question: what exactly is driving the link? Is the lower nutritional quality of many highly processed foods? Is it additive exposure? Could exposures related to packaging, such as microplastics, also play a role? At this stage, the study cannot answer this.

This nuance matters, especially in parenting and fertility coverage, where it’s easy for complex research to flatten into scary advice. Most families are already under enough pressure. No one needs another title that turns every snack into a moral failure. The most useful takeaway is not perfection. It is awareness.

This study shows that the eating patterns that both partners bring to the period before conception may matter more than people once thought. It’s yet another reminder that reproductive health begins before pregnancy, and that the conversation needs to include fathers in a much more serious way than it often does now.

It’s also a reminder of how difficult healthy choices can be in everyday life. Highly processed foods became common for reasons that are easy to understand. They are cheap, fast, familiar and convenient. For many families, they are part of the way of survival. So this is not a blame story. It’s a story about recognizing that the environment people live in doesn’t always make simple healthy choices, even when those choices may matter.

conversation health Parents prepregnancy study
bhanuprakash.cg
healthtost
  • Website

Related Posts

Yoga, Pregnancy, Motherhood and Connection

July 2, 2026

Complete Guide to 2026 — Sexual Health Alliance

June 30, 2026

Yoga poses for expectant mothers

June 28, 2026

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss
Sexual Health

Climate justice is reproductive justice

By healthtostJuly 2, 20260

Authors: Thoai D. Ngo, Neha Mankani, Nicole Haberland, Martha Schaaf, Aleya Khalifa, Allan…

Plant-based diets offer heart benefits but may require supplementation

July 2, 2026

A Promising New Painless Home Treatment – SkinCare Physicians

July 2, 2026

5 STDs that can cause bruising

July 2, 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
TAGS
Baby benefits body brain cancer care Day Diet disease exercise finds Fitness food Guide health healthy heart Improve Life Loss Men mental Natural Nutrition Patients People Pregnancy research reveals risk routine sex sexual Skin Skincare study Therapy Tips Top Training Treatment ways weight women Workout
About Us
About Us

Welcome to HealthTost, your trusted source for breaking health news, expert insights, and wellness inspiration. At HealthTost, we are committed to delivering accurate, timely, and empowering information to help you make informed decisions about your health and well-being.

Latest Articles

Climate justice is reproductive justice

July 2, 2026

Plant-based diets offer heart benefits but may require supplementation

July 2, 2026

A Promising New Painless Home Treatment – SkinCare Physicians

July 2, 2026
New Comments
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer
    © 2026 HealthTost. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.