Ovulation Prediction Myths ? And Facts

Women and couples seeking information about ovulation prediction will unfortunately find a lot of conflicting information.  Much of this advice is based on discredited theories about how a woman can identify when she’s ovulating. For a woman to accurately pinpoint ovulation requires that she know exactly how long her cycle is and what changes in her body predict when she is entering her fertile phase.  This article will expose the most detrimental ovulation prediction myth and explain one method for predicting ovulation that has been scientifically proven to display over 96% accuracy.

Possibly the most common myth about ovulation prediction is that a woman ovulates on day #14 of her cycle.  First, let’s explain what we mean by “day #14.”  The first day of a woman’s menstruation – when she begins true bleeding – is considered “day #1.”  Some authors and articles proclaim that all a woman has to do is count 14 days from the first day of her period and that is when she will be ovulating.

However, this is dangerous misinformation!  It is based on the mathematically incorrect assumption that most women have a 28-day cycle.  This is simply not true.  As many women know, some cycles can be as short as 18 days or as long as 50+ days.  The error arises from the mistaken belief that because the number of days in the human cycle averages out to be 28 days, that most women have a menstrual cycle that lasts 28 days.

For comparison, let’s assume that you know 10 people who each have one pet and 10 other people who each have three pets.  This averages out to two pets per person.  But of those 20 people, actually NONE of them have two pets!  This is not to say that there are no women who have cycles that are 28 days long – but many women do not have 28-day cycles.
Most ovulation predictor kits tell a woman to begin testing on day 11 of her cycle (counting forward from the first day of menstruation).  Many women following these instructions will ovulate well before or after Day 11, and miss their fertile phase altogether – literally “flushing” their money down the toilet! 

One simple solution to the “how do I know when I’m ovulating” problem is to track and view one’s saliva.  Saliva fertility test kits are available for this purpose.  The best are licensed medical devices accountable to regulatory bodies such as Health Canada or the United States Food and Drug Administration.  These kits are durable and reusable, and are often more cost-effective than many disposable urine-examination kits because they require no refills or replacement test strips.  Also, many women prefer to track saliva than urine for hygienic or aesthetic reasons.  The saliva tracking method for calculating fertility is approximately 96% accurate.

Tracking saliva works because, when a woman enters her fertile phase, high estrogen levels cause her mucus membranes to secrete more bio-salts in cervical fluid, nasal fluid, tears and saliva.  These fluids, when dried and viewed through a microscope, appear crystallized or “ferned” during a woman’s fertile phase. 

Colleen Biggs, president and founder of the ovulation prediction kit manufacturer OvumOptics, Inc., struggled for years to obtain accurate, reliable information about even basic fertility issues.  Her personal experience with ovulation prediction myths was part of what led her to develop the Ovu-Trac® Ovulation Predictor Kit in 1996. 

Daniel J. Gilbert is the Chief Executive Officer and founder of Aurora Information Technology, Inc. a New York-based medical web development, content management, public relations, and Internet marketing firm. He brings over 15 years of expertise in software development and marketing to Aurora IT. He has held Senior Management and Research and Development positions at Lucent Technologies/Bell Labs and Avaya. Mr. Gilbert has a Master’s in International Economics from University of Denver, and a Master of Science in Telecommunications from University of Colorado – Boulder.


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