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The Infertility Diet: Get Pregnant and Prevent Miscarriage |  | Author: Martin Keltz Publisher: Peanut Butter and Jelly Press Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy Used: $2.46 as of 11/22/2009 02:54 MST details You Save: $22.49 (90%)
New (5) Used (46) from $2.46
Seller: awesomebooksusa Rating: 59 reviews Sales Rank: 241548
Media: Paperback Pages: 288 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 8.5 x 5.5 x 0.7
ISBN: 1893290395 Dewey Decimal Number: 618.1780654 EAN: 9781893290396 ASIN: 1893290395
Publication Date: May 31, 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Eat your way to pregnancy! The Infertility Diet is a nutritional approach to fertility enhancement and miscarriage prevention. Endorsed by infertility doctors across the country, this book is based on over 500 medical studies linking fertility and nutrition, and is a groundbreaker in the field. The essential diet for anyone trying to have a baby. A caring gift for all potential parents. The Infertility Diet: Get Pregnant and Prevent Miscarriage supplies specific nutritional advice for couples with problems including sperm count, motility, morphology and clumping; miscarriage; candida albicans; cervical fluid; endometriosis; estrogen/progesterone balance; hypothyroidism; luteal phase defects; ovulation; PCO; elevated prolactin levels; and prostaglandin. Learn what foods to eat--and what foods to avoid--to get pregnant and carry your baby to term.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 59
Fertility Diet September 1, 2009 Lynn M. Laurence (Wyandotte, Mi USA) This book was good but could have been more detailed and i fealt it only hit the surface of this subject. It's a easy read.
Wrong author listed February 26, 2009 D. Wilson It's sad to see that the author listed is not correct. The author is Fern Reiss. Martin Keltz is an MD who has endorsed Ms Reiss' book.
Pregnant after 6 years January 19, 2007 New Mama Bear 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
After 3 failed IVFs, countless other procedures (including surgery), a miscarriage, and seeing 4 infertility OBGYNs, all of whom were considered among the top in their field, (and over $35K spent), we were told that the only way we were having a baby was with a donated egg. My husband bought this book, said it was our last hurrah, and followed the basic principles, which he distilled into a group of foods to avoid and foods to eat every day. We followed the diet for five months (it's easier to stick to if you know it's not forever) and I got pregnant in the sixth month. Our son is now 14 months old. My OBGYN calls him the miracle baby. We ate a lot of yams, true, but they were not the wild type, just the regular Safeway ones, and my husband fried them in oil and garlic. I think the best thing about this book is that the author is so positive and upbeat and makes you believe that you can conceive against overwhelming odds, which is the opposite of what all the specialists had been telling us for years.
I did get pregnant after one month! May 3, 2006 Stephanie Polster 12 out of 12 found this review helpful
I did not follow the diet strictly, but I simplified the diet by buying Amy's brown rice and tofu bowls which had most of the ingredients she recommended. I ate one of these every day for lunch. I also ate yams, yams and more yams. I got them from the local International grocery in St. Louis. I would think it would be hard to implement this diet if you are not in an urban area. I had been trying to get pregnant for a year before I tried this, and when I tried the diet, I got pregnant within a month. I agree that the diet is confusing, and it was impossible for me to follow strictly. But I did do the best I could and it seemed to work.
This book just makes sense January 19, 2006 Uptown Girl (Boston, MA) 3 out of 8 found this review helpful
The previous reviewer's comments seem very harsh, and I can only guess she was hoping for a quick fix to her own infertility. How can one blame infertility on a good diet? I think the author makes a very solid connection between diet and infertility and her recommendations are good, but of course, one needs to be ready to implement change. If you are not ready to give up meat, of course you may be put off by her advice as the previous reviewer was. Animal proteins (meat) are not the only, and definitely not the best, source for iron, zinc and calcium. Any quick search on the internet will provide you with a list of alternative sources for these minerals...plus most women who are trying to get pregnant should be taking a prenatal vitamin, which will supplemant their mineral needs. But one should always look to food sources first for their vitamins and minerals as they are most easily absorbed by the body. I for one agree that food has a connection to infertility, plus who wouldn't want to "detox" their bodies to ensure they have a health environment for a growing baby.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 59
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