Tell me when you were born to tell you what your disease is.

The new study shows the link between birth months and maternal illness should be careful when planning to give birth to a child because it can affect their health. According to recent studies, much less babies are born between November and March and more between September and June. From [...]
New Study Shows the Link Between Birth Month and Disease
Mothers should be careful when planning to give birth to a child, since this can affect their health.
According to recent studies, much less babies are born between November and March and more between September and June. From long-time data, this indicates that mothers have begun planning their baby's month.
Children born in autumn and winter are more likely to develop food allergies. While scientists cannot explain why it occurs, asthma is most common among children born in the autumn.
One of the theories suggests that children are exposed to allegens, such as spider dust in the first months of their birth when they are more at home and in closed environments.
For respiratory diseases, reproductive and neurological diseases, children born in October and November are more endangered. For cardiovascular problems born from September to November, they are more protected. Meanwhile, those born in January and December are most at risk.
Seeing the large number of people who lose their lives because of cardiovascular diseases, those born in the autumn are more likely to live longer. While mothers giving birth to their children in the summer have higher levels of vitamin D, which affect the child's growth and development.
Even previous studies seem to have seen a connection between child health and birth month.
Researchers still have much uncertainty about the relationship between birth and health months, but they have clearly noticed these changes based on long - held statistics.











