The Pregnancy Doctor: Pregnancy Is Halved Every Year After Age 32! If You Want 2+ Children, DO THIS!

The Pregnancy Doctor: Pregnancy Is Halved Every Year After Age 32! If You Want 2+ Children, DO THIS!

The Diary of a CEOJun 3, 20242h 22m

Dr. Natalie Crawford (guest), Steven Bartlett (host)

Global decline in fertility and rise of infertility diagnosesEgg ‘vault’, ovarian reserve, and the impact of age on fertilityMale fertility, sperm production, and lifestyle/environmental toxinsPCOS, endometriosis, irregular cycles and their impact on conceptionLifestyle foundations: sleep, diet, exercise, toxins and stressEgg freezing, IVF, embryo banking and genetic testingStigma, emotional burden, relationships, and proactive family planning

In this episode of The Diary of a CEO, featuring Dr. Natalie Crawford and Steven Bartlett, The Pregnancy Doctor: Pregnancy Is Halved Every Year After Age 32! If You Want 2+ Children, DO THIS! explores fertility Crisis: How Age, Lifestyle, And Misinformation Sabotage Parenthood Plans Fertility doctor Dr. Natalie Crawford explains why infertility is sharply rising despite advances in reproductive technology, highlighting later childbearing, poorer general health, environmental toxins, and widespread lack of basic reproductive education.

Fertility Crisis: How Age, Lifestyle, And Misinformation Sabotage Parenthood Plans

Fertility doctor Dr. Natalie Crawford explains why infertility is sharply rising despite advances in reproductive technology, highlighting later childbearing, poorer general health, environmental toxins, and widespread lack of basic reproductive education.

She contrasts male and female biology, explaining how women are born with a fixed ‘vault’ of eggs that rapidly declines in number and quality after the early 30s, while sperm are continuously produced and highly lifestyle-sensitive.

The conversation covers concrete lifestyle changes that meaningfully affect fertility, the myths and stigma around IVF, egg freezing and birth control, and the emotional toll of infertility, pregnancy loss, PCOS and endometriosis.

Crawford argues for proactive ‘family planning as prevention’: testing ovarian reserve, understanding diagnoses early, and using tools like egg/embryo freezing and IVF strategically if you want multiple children or know you have risk factors.

Key Takeaways

Female fertility declines earlier and faster than most people realize, especially after 32–35.

Women are born with all the eggs they will ever have: ~1–2 million at birth, ~300,000 in reproductive years, ~20,000 by age 37, and fewer than 1,000 at menopause. ...

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Testing ovarian reserve early can change life decisions, yet many guidelines still discourage it.

Ovarian reserve is essentially “how many eggs are left in the vault,” commonly measured by AMH blood test and an antral follicle count (ultrasound of how many small follicles are visible in a given month). ...

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Male fertility is highly modifiable within about three months; common habits significantly damage sperm.

Men produce 200–300 million sperm per day (about 1,500 per second), with a ~90-day sperm lifecycle (72 days of production + ~18 days of transport/storage). ...

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Lifestyle fundamentals—sleep, diet, stress, exercise, and toxin exposure—directly affect reproductive hormones, egg/sperm quality, and miscarriage risk.

The brain constantly asks, “Can this body safely sustain a pregnancy now? ...

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Irregular or absent periods are *not* normal and often signal underlying disease that affects fertility and long-term health.

A healthy menstrual cycle is regular and predictable for the individual (roughly 24–35 days). ...

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Egg freezing and especially embryo banking are powerful tools if used at the right age and for the right goal.

Egg freezing and IVF both start with the same process: 2 weeks of injectable FSH to grow one month’s cohort of follicles, then a short anesthetized procedure to retrieve eggs. ...

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Infertility carries profound shame, guilt, and relationship strain—and people need both medical clarity and emotional support.

Crawford describes her own four pregnancy losses, including an ectopic pregnancy, and the isolation of miscarrying silently because she hadn’t told anyone she was pregnant. ...

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Notable Quotes

You can't control everything, but you should be able to control the factors you can.

Dr. Natalie Crawford

If you and your partner wait till 35, your chances of getting pregnant per month are going to be approximately 10 to 15%. At 40, it's about 5%.

Dr. Natalie Crawford

It's a very inefficient way to try to achieve a life goal to settle for something that gives you a 3% chance of success.

Dr. Natalie Crawford

A normal period is one that is regular and predictable. If you're canceling dinner or not going to school because of pain, that's not normal.

Dr. Natalie Crawford

In the journey, it doesn't make sense, but that's not your job in the journey—to understand the whys. It's to keep going and not give up.

Dr. Natalie Crawford

Questions Answered in This Episode

For someone in their late 20s who wants three or four children but is still in intensive training or building a career, how would you concretely structure a 10-year family planning roadmap, including when (or whether) to test AMH, freeze eggs, or bank embryos?

Fertility doctor Dr. ...

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You mentioned sperm counts have halved in 50 years and that the decline has accelerated recently; if you had to prioritize only three environmental or lifestyle changes at a population level to reverse that trend, which would they be and why?

She contrasts male and female biology, explaining how women are born with a fixed ‘vault’ of eggs that rapidly declines in number and quality after the early 30s, while sperm are continuously produced and highly lifestyle-sensitive.

Get the full analysis with uListen AI

In cases where endometriosis is strongly suspected but access to laparoscopy is limited or risky, what specific non-surgical indicators or trial treatments do you use to decide when to move straight to IVF versus pursuing surgery first?

The conversation covers concrete lifestyle changes that meaningfully affect fertility, the myths and stigma around IVF, egg freezing and birth control, and the emotional toll of infertility, pregnancy loss, PCOS and endometriosis.

Get the full analysis with uListen AI

Given your criticism of current guidelines that discourage ovarian reserve testing in women not yet trying to conceive, what would a more evidence-based and psychologically safe guideline look like if you were rewriting it from scratch?

Crawford argues for proactive ‘family planning as prevention’: testing ovarian reserve, understanding diagnoses early, and using tools like egg/embryo freezing and IVF strategically if you want multiple children or know you have risk factors.

Get the full analysis with uListen AI

When a couple has failed multiple IVF cycles with few or no euploid embryos, how do you help them weigh the emotional, financial, and ethical trade-offs between doing more cycles with their own gametes versus transitioning to donor eggs, donor embryos, or adoption?

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Transcript Preview

Dr. Natalie Crawford

People are waiting longer to get pregnant, but if we imagine that there is a vault of your eggs, by the time you're born, you have one to two million. In your reproductive years, 300,000. This means if you and your partner wait till 35, your chances of getting pregnant are going to be approximately ...

Steven Bartlett

I feel like I better get a move on.

Dr. Natalie Crawford

But there are things that we can do to improve your reproduction, and this is information that nobody talks about.

Steven Bartlett

So let's get into it.

Dr. Natalie Crawford

Let's do it. Dr. Natalie Crawford is a double-certified practicing fertility doctor. Helping people to optimize their lifestyle to improve fertility. Rates of infertility are increasing. One out of every eight women would have infertility, and now it's one out of every five, and there's multiple factors that are contributing, including irregular or lack of having a period. There's more autoimmune disease, obesity, chronic stress. People are waiting. But at 40, your chance of miscarriage is 50%, and suddenly, you're left behind, and I know that because I had four pregnancy losses, and... I'm gonna cry now.

Steven Bartlett

Lots of people will be struggling with a variety of the things that you've talked about. What would you tell them?

Dr. Natalie Crawford

You can't control everything, but you should be able to control the factors you can.

Steven Bartlett

So what would my daily habits look like?

Dr. Natalie Crawford

I love that question. So-

Steven Bartlett

What about our misconceptions around how to increase our odds of getting pregnant?

Dr. Natalie Crawford

Yes. There's so many myths.

Steven Bartlett

If a female orgasms, does that increase the chance of fertility?

Dr. Natalie Crawford

This is super interesting.

Steven Bartlett

And then what is the number one thing that people don't do that impacts their reproductive system?

Dr. Natalie Crawford

It seems so straightforward. It's not a pill that you take or major change of behavior. It is simply...

Steven Bartlett

We've just hit six million subscribers on The Diary of a CEO. Um, so me and my team would like to do something we've never done before as a little thank you, and we're calling it The Diary of a CEO Subscriber Raffle, and here is how it works. Every episode this month, we're going to pick three current subscribers at random, and we'll send one of you a 1,000 pound voucher, one of you tickets to come and watch The Diary of a CEO behind the scenes live with our team, and one of you will have a 10-minute phone call with me to discuss whatever you want to talk about. If you're a subscriber, you're in the raffle. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for allowing me to do something that me and my team love doing so much. It is the greatest honor of my lifetime, and I hope it, I hope it continues, uh, off into the future. Let's get to the episode. Natalie, who are you, and what is the mission that you're on?

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