Are women fertile all the time

Health related question in topics Womens Health .We found some answers as below for this question “Are women fertile all the time”,you can compare them.

No, women are not fertile all the time. There are times in her cycle when a woman is more likely to get pregnant. ChaCha! [ Source: http://www.chacha.com/question/are-women-fertile-all-the-time ]
More Answers to “Are women fertile all the time
When is a woman most fertile time?
http://answers.ask.com/Health/Other/when_is_a_woman_most_fertile_time
A women is most fertile during the middle of her menstrual cycle. This time is called ovulation. Ovulation occurs around the 14th day of a woman’s cycle.
When is the most fertile time for a woman?
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20100104170854AANEiTI
It’s usually on or around day 14 of your menstrual cycle- therefore fourteen days after you first started bleeding.
What are the most fertile times for women?
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What+are+the+most+fertile+times
Usually between day 10 and 14 of the monthly cycle, although a woman can get pregnant at any time of the month..

Related Questions Answered on Y!Answers

can somebody tell me a some more about when women are most firtile during the month?
Q: hi i would like 2 learn some more about fertility please.i know that (in general) women are most fertile 14 days after the first day of their last period but i dont know how long this most fertile time lasts. all answered are much appriciated and also advice or answers from nurses or doctors would be great too .thank you xthanks you 3, the answers were very helpfull x
A: most women are fertile for about 5 days 10-14days after their period.
Do women always ovulate the same time each month or can it differ month to month?
Q: I had gotten preggers with my daughter (now 9 months) no more then 7 days after my period ended. Me and my husband are trying again and according to charts my most fertile time would have been all of last week ending maybe yesterday or today. But if I tend to ovulate early will it be this way evey month or can it change month to month. I did have thick disvharge (sorry) last week as per a sign of ovulation. Do you think that if I did ovulate the middle of last week and were still supposed to be fertile yesterday and today that I could get pregnant if we try again today and for the next few days, or is it already to late this month?O and we did try yesterday as well.
A: It can change every month but it actually depends on how long your luteal phase is. This is gonna be technical but you did ask. The Luteal Phase is the time from ovulation to your next period. For most women it is 12-16 days. The luteal phase does stay the same pretty much each cycle. So you can ovulate on different days but your luteal phase will be the same. You really need to find out your luteal phase to know for sure. To do this you can take your temp each morning when you wake up. It has to be the same time every morning(vary no more than 30 minutes). You have to have had at least 3 hours of sleep. Then you just graph those temps. Your base temps will be when you are on your period. When you ovulate your temperature will rise up to a whole degree higher.For example let’s say your luteal phase is 15 days and one month you ovulate on cycle day 15 and your luteal phase is 15 days so your whole cycle will be 30 days. Now let’s say the next month you ovulate on cycle day 13 and your luteal phase is 15 days still so your whole cycle will be 28 days. Then the 3rd month you ovulate on cycle day 15 again but your luteal phase changes and is 16 days so your whole cycle would last 31 days. If you are a very regular period then usually even your ovulation day will only vary slightly (by a few days at the most). I hope this makes sense. Good luck! I have a 9-month old daughter too. Here is my temperature charts on fertilityfriend.com in case you want to see how it works. The first one is my current chart…I am not going to actually temp until tomorrow. The second chart down is one when I took clomid. You can see my ovulation (by temp rise from 96.8 to 97.3 and see how it stayed up through ovulation. On that chart my temperature dropped back down to baseline on my 3rd day of my period. http://www.fertilityfriend.com/home/64209
Could the sudden attraction to waif-like women have to do with the population?
Q: People can argue this or not, but a woman with fuller hips and fuller breasts is often times more fertile than a woman with a boyish figure. That is the reason women are shaped the way they are in the first place, to aid childbirth. Strangely enough, I have noticed men being more attracted to abnormally skinny women who often have trouble giving birth (read about almost all the celebrity births and they almost always had fertility treatments and c-sections) and look down on women with a real woman’s body. Maybe this is because of a subconcious sense of overpopulation and a desire to have less children without even realizing it.
A: Interesting theory.But it could also be argued that the “thin idealization” only happens in modernized countries and not so much in third-world countries, where access to modern family planning is generally less prevelant so there are generally more births. If this was an evolutionary process, you would find people in overpopulated third-world countries liking thin women, rather than those in developed countries like the U.S.Rather, it could be that in places where food is overabundant, being thin suggests one would likely survive longer. After all, obesity has been proven to shorten lifespans. I like your theory, though.
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