HONG KONG - Women in Asia are largely ignorant about fertility  problems and tend to blame their failure to conceive on "God's will" and  bad luck, a survey has found.
 The survey, which  covered 1,000 women in 10 countries who had been trying to conceive for  at least six months, found that 62 percent of them did not suspect they  may have a fertility problem.
 They were even  less likely to point the finger at their husbands, with 80 percent of  them not suspecting that their partners may have a problem with  fertility.
 Infertility is defined by the World  Health Organization as the inability to conceive after a year of  regular, unprotected sex. But only 43 percent of the women surveyed knew  that.
 Only 30 percent of the women, all aged  25-40, recognised that obesity could reduce fertility and only 36  percent knew that chances of getting pregnant declined with age.
  Forty-three percent did not know a man may be infertile even if he  could achieve an erection and 73 percent were unaware that men who had  mumps after puberty could be infertile later on.
  Instead of getting treatment, 46 percent of respondents blamed their  inability to conceive on "God's will" and 45 percent put it down to bad  luck.
 Lead researcher P C Wong at the National  University Hospital Women's Centre in Singapore said such a lack of  understanding could result in couples waiting too long - only to realise  when they finally decided to seek help that it may be too late.
  "That's a lost opportunity because even if they come for treatment, our  success of treatment is higher with younger women," said Wong, who  heads the reproductive endocrinology and infertility division at the  hospital.
 Chances of success with in-vitro  fertilisation - the best known fertility treatment - is 40-50 percent  when a woman is under 30 years old but that drops to 10 percent once the  woman is over 40. By 44-45, the chance of success is one percent.
  "The reason is because eggs in the ovaries decline in quality and  quantity ... as we go along and age, the chances of conceiving is much  lower," Wong said by telephone.
 The survey,  commissioned by Merck KGaA unit Merck Serono, covered China, India,  Japan, South Korea, Thailand, Vietnam, Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan and  Malaysia.
Wong said his team hoped to work on a similar survey targeting men in Asia. - Reuters
source: gmanetwork.com