Does your lifestyle matter if you're going to have kids?
Through the emerging field of epigenetics we are learning that the health of parents affects the health of their children. And surprisingly, this applies to the father as well as the mother.
Lamarkian theories aside, this notion goes back to the Dutch Famine of 1944-45 that revealed how nutrition can be linked to offspring.
Sundus Nizamani is a PhD researcher at the Faculty of Health, University of Canberra. You get involved with her study via her Facebook page www.facebook.com/Fit4Fertility. Fun, informative and an opportunity to learn about heath.
Interview by Rod
Rethinking Sustainability, Adelaide
Let’s Not Lose Them
One Voice Medicine Conversations with First People Healers
Rocks That Shape Australia
The Titanic: economics, neoliberalism and state capture
The Path to a Sustainable Civilisation
Walking on the Moon
Healthy waters, healthy lands
Tectonic movements and historic biogeography - Octavio Jimenez Robles
They knew but they did it anyway
Forest Bathing
The energy transition
Community and the global challenge
8 Billion and counting
States of denial. A tribute to Dr Haydn Washington.
Fail / resubmit. Scoring the environment Australian
How many Australians?
Forever growth
Diet and rheumatoid arthritis
Geodesy: A guide for epic journeys
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Earthfiles Podcast with Linda Moulton Howe
DNA Today: A Genetics Podcast
The Psychic Elephant Radio Podcast
Sasquatch Chronicles
Hidden Brain