Passnownow

Rated 4.8/5 by parents & students

Bad at maths? Blame your mum: Numerical skills are decided in the womb, scientists discover

If you have always found doing sums a struggle, you might just be able to blame your mother.

Because research has linked a woman’s hormone levels in pregnancy with her child’s maths skills at age five.

Boys and girls whose mothers were very low in the hormone thyroxine were almost twice as likely to do badly in arithmetic tests, it found.

Thyroxine, which passes from mother to baby in the womb, is crucial for the development of the brain – but many expectant mothers have too little of it.

Researcher Martijn Finken studied almost 1,200 children from when they were in the womb until they started school.

He measured their mothers’ thyroxine levels 12 weeks into pregnancy and compared the results with the children’s scores in arithmetic and language tests at age five.

Those who were exposed to the lowest levels of thyroxine in the womb were 90 per cent more likely to end up in the bottom half of the class for maths.

This was true even after taking into account the child’s family background and health at birth.

Interestingly, hormone levels were not linked to the children’s scores on tests of vocabulary and ability with language.

Dr Finken said this may be because our language skills owe a lot to our upbringing.

Our maths ability, on the other hand, can be traced more directly back to brain development.

The researcher, a paediatric endocrinologist from the VU University Medical Center in Amsterdam, will continue to track the children’s progress as they go through their school years.

Dr Finken said: ‘Whether these problems persist into adulthood remains to be seen. We will continue to follow these children to answer this next big question.’

He added that it may be possible to deal with the problem simply by testing women’s hormones early in pregnancy and giving thyroxine supplements to those who need them.

Doctors have tried this in the past with little success, but Dr Finken believes that is because the supplements were not given early enough. Women should take the tablets in the first four weeks of pregnancy, he said.

British doctors have previously warned that many teenage girls are dangerously low on iodine – putting the health of their future children at risk.

A 2011 study of 700 schoolgirls revealed almost 70 per cent were deficient in the mineral.

Researchers said young girls are not drinking enough milk.

Experts say most people should get all the iodine they need by eating a varied diet.

5 thoughts on “Bad at maths? Blame your mum: Numerical skills are decided in the womb, scientists discover”

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top