Are peas bad for you?
Infertility is definitely a worrying problem. In Singapore, about 15 percent of couples do not get pregnant successfully within 12 months of trying to conceive.
If you are one of the 15 percent who have trouble conceiving, you might want to start altering your diet, and the first thing you might want to omit is peas.
According to the author of the Fertility Diet , nutritionist Sarah Dobbyn, peas are the enemy of women trying to conceive. And to a certain extent, eggs, fruit juices, meat, sugar, dairy and alcohol are also bad for fertility.
Dobbyn suggests the influence of diet on fertility is often overlooked and by making “drastic” changes in their diet, women in their 40s and 50s could increase their chance of having a baby.
She also encourages couples to eat unlimited quantities of beans, pulses, organic herbs, spices and nuts, and raw fruit and vegetables whenever possible. The aim of all this is to apparently help ‘balance the body’s hormones’.
Another author, Fern Reiss, has also linked peas to infertility. Reiss, who studied cooking and nutrition at the Culinary Institute of America and the Kushi Institute for Macrobiotic Studies, writes in her book, ‘The Infertility Diet’ that peas “seem to contain a national contraceptive (m-xylohydroquinone) which interferes with estrogen and progesterone: In a study of rats fed 20% of their diet in peas, litter sizes were reduced and 30% had no offspring.”
While there has been no conclusive studies that scientifically link peas to infertility, it’s best to err of the side of caution and consume peas in moderation.
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