Life In The Womb

By Peter Nathanielsz
Image of Life in the Womb: The Origin of Health and Disease
FormatUSUK
Hardcover$27.50 Buy£17.22 Buy

How the pre-natal environment can influence the outcome of the baby. Low birth weight is a known indicator for coronary heart disease.

Experts who have recommended this book

In an interview on Life Before Birth – and life after it

Interview Extract:

What about Life In the Womb?

This is a very clear and stimulating overview of how sensitive the development of the fetus is to outside influence, and how this can have implications for the health of the individual, across the lifespan. Nathanielsz discusses the work of David Barker and colleagues who have shown that babies who are born smaller are more likely to die of coronary heart diseases at the end of life, than those who are born larger. Environmental effects from the womb can even be passed to the grandchild generation.

He writes about the new understanding of genetics and the environment and describes how the environment that will influence the development of the person starts in the womb and how that has implications for alter health. It is very well-established that babies with a lower birth weight are more likely to die in their 70s of coronary hearth disease and it is as big an indicator as smoking or being overweight.

Most people die in their 70s though. It doesn’t seem too bad an innings.

Maybe not, but it is interesting in terms of fetal programming and the effects of maternal stress on the long-term outcome.

Read full interview

About Vivette Glover

Professor Vivette Glover is Professor of Perinatal Psychobiology at Imperial College London. In 1997 she set up the Fetal and Neonatal Stress Research Group, to study fetal and neonatal stress responses, methods to reduce them, and their long term effects. Vivette has published over 400 papers.