Smoking Or Drinking During Pregnancy Can Make Your Baby GAY, I DON'T BUY IT
A controversial new study claims that decisions made by women when they
are pregnant can affect their babies brains including determining their
sexuality, intelligence and chances of developing autism.
The suggestion that the lifestyle of an expectant mother can affect
their offspring's development has been put forward in Professor Dick
Swaab's new book We Are Our Brains.
The professor of neurology at Amsterdam University claims that the
chance of having a child who is gay can be determined by a range of
factors including how stressed pregnant women are as well as whether
they smoke and their exposure to amphetamines.
'Pregnant women suffering from stress are also more likely to have
homosexual children of both genders because their raised level of the
stress hormone cortisol affects the production of foetal sex hormones,'
Swaab said reported The Sunday Times.
The development of the brain is such a delicate process during pregnancy
that Swaab believes any small changes can have a major impact on a
person's life.
A key example of this was in a study which found that women who took the
synthetic estrogen DES when pregnant were more likely to have daughters
with bisexual or homosexual tendencies.
The drug was widely prescribed to pregnant women as an anti-miscarriage
drug for more than 20 years and researchers found that eight of the 117
DES daughters studied had bisexual or homosexual tendencies, while none
did in a carefully selected 117-woman control group.
Some traits are dictated by nature. Research has previously found that
boys with older brothers are more likely to be homosexual than those
with sisters, younger brothers or no siblings at all.
For every older brother a man has, the chances of him being gay
increases by 33 per cent, according to Canadian psychologist Ray
Blanchard.
Former Aston Villa, West Ham and German international footballer Thomas
Hitzlsperger who announced he was gay earlier this month has five older
brothers and one sister.
The report suggest that this could be due to a mother's immune system
developing stronger responses to the male hormone produced by boy babies
during each pregnancy.
Another link was an expectant mother's alcohol consumption which can
affect how new brain cells integrate into the growing brain. The NHS
advises pregnant woman that if they choose to drink they must 'protect
your baby by not drinking more than one to two units of alcohol once or
twice a week, and don't get drunk.'
And Swaab says that studies show the pronounced effect alcohol can have on children.
'Even in women who drink just a glass of wine a day we see effects (such as) lower IQ and hyperactivity.'
Other links made in the study suggest that exposure to traffic fumes and
industrial air pollution can dramatically increase a mother's chances
of having a child with autism.
Researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health found the risk was
doubled for women living in the most polluted locations. 'Our findings
raise concerns since, depending on the pollutant, 20 per cent to 60 per
cent of the women in our study lived in areas where risk of autism was
elevated,' said lead scientist Dr Andrea Roberts .
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