Appy · 2 min
Your family history is information, not destiny
3 sections · 2 min read
Why does your family's reproductive history matter for your fertility?
Conditions like PMOS, , , early , and recurrent miscarriage often cluster in families. So do metabolic conditions, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, high blood pressure, that affect fertility through their effect on insulin, weight, and blood flow.
In many South Asian families these conversations have not happened. Your grandmother may have had heavy periods, your aunt may have gone through , your mother may have had a late , and none of it may ever have been said aloud.
How do you talk to your partner about getting fertility tests?
A simple opening: 'Auntie, I'm trying to understand my own body better. Can I ask you about how your periods were?' Or: 'Mum, did nani ever talk to you about her fertility or ?'
You may get closed answers at first. Many older women never had the language to describe what they went through. Sometimes a second conversation, when the initial surprise has passed, brings more information.
What information about family history should you write down?
Useful facts to know: age of first period and in mother, aunts, grandmothers; history of miscarriages or difficulty conceiving; history of PMOS, , , or cancer; history of diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease; consanguinity (whether your parents or grandparents are related by blood, this matters for specific genetic conditions).
Bring this to your doctor or fertility consultation. It genuinely shapes what tests and treatments they might consider.
How did this land with you?
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Reviewed by clinicians
Authored and reviewed by clinicians from the founding team. Information only, not personalised medical advice.