Services Available at a Fertility Clinic
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For some couples, a gynecologist or urologist will be able to resolve their fertility issues quickly and easily. For others, a diagnosis or solution may be much harder to come by. This is often the time when couples will turn to a fertility specialist to answer their questions and provide the right treatment.
Finding a fertility clinic can be a step closer to a healthy baby for many couples. These facilities are usually set up to address a broad range of fertility issues, ensuring that the large majority of couples will see success through diagnosis and treatment at these locations. Most of these clinics can work with both the husband and wife on diagnosing and treating medical conditions that are getting in the way of a successful pregnancy – providing state of the art testing and procedures for even the most complex problems.
Services for men are just one of the options available at a Pensacola fertility clinic. Men are just as likely to have fertility problems as women, but the good news is that there are many treatment options for men today. Most quality clinics will provide a detailed semen analysis and some may even offer the high tech procedure, Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection or ICSI. This very precise procedure allows professionals to inject a single sperm into an egg for a greater likelihood of fertilization.
Other important services to look for in a fertility clinic include those that fall under the category of assisted reproductive technology. Procedures here might be in vitro fertilization, or IVF. IVF is the process of fertilizing the egg outside of the body in an artificial environment and then placing the fertilized egg, or embryo, back inside the womb. This procedure has become so successful in recent years, it has replaced other forms of assisted reproductive technology like GIFT and ZIFT. ICSI is another form of assisted reproductive technology that many fertility clinics now offer.
Third party reproduction, such as egg donation and gestational surrogacy are also provided at some clinics. If these are procedures that a couple is looking for, it is important to ask a Tallahassee fertility clinic up front if they provide these types of options. Egg donation can be done through either a directed or an anonymous donor, depending on the preference of the parents. Sometimes embryos are donated by couples who have previously gone through infertility treatments and completed their families before all of their embryos were implanted. It is important to find out what specific types of third party reproduction a clinic provides to ensure a couple makes the right choice for them.
Another type of service that might be available at a fertility clinic is emotional support. This may be in the form of one-on-one counseling or support groups that are formed with other patients of the clinic. Some couples find that having emotional assistance throughout the course of infertility treatments is essential in surviving the stressful process.
Fertility clinics are the perfect place for couples who have not seen success through gynecologists or urologists. The staffs at these clinics are highly trained in their field of specialty to get couples to the final reward – a healthy, bouncing baby.
Watch the video related
Some parents in Louisiana are now wondering if they are in fact biologically related to their children, after a fertility clinic held embryos which were not properly labeled. Mark Strassmann reports.
Help answer the question
Why don't people who oppose embryonic stem cell research go after fertility clinics instead?
The main argument they use is that it leads to destruction of a potential human life, but they always seem to ignore the fact that the stem cells come from unused embryos in fertility clinics that were going to be discarded anyway rather than implanted. If it was a developing fetus that was already in the womb, that's one thing, but it's ridiculous to say the same thing about a blastocyst that won't even be implanted because then you might as well say that every egg or sperm is a potential human life. They also argue that embryonic stem cell research has failed to produce any cures, but if there's barely any research actually being done, then of course it's not going to produce any cures.
fertility clinics
14 Comments
October 9th, 2009 at 12:06 pm
Pro-lifers who oppose embryonic stem cell research were opposing in vitro fertilization from the outset, for the very reason that so many embryos would be destroyed.
Many other people have only begun to comprehend the problem of knowing what to do with these embryos.
Science and technology is ahead of ethics and always has been. This is not new nor will it end any time soon.
October 9th, 2009 at 12:43 pm
Sunny side up?
October 9th, 2009 at 7:12 pm
I think the fertility clinic issue is a huge wrench in the Christian Right's machine. They do not protest there, why? They do not seem to care if those embryos are destroyed, but they can't be used for federal embryonic stem cell research? This is an issue I'd like to see more in the press.
PS: Hellbent: It's me that's reporting you. Not because you're a clone (which is against the rules you agreed to), but because you're hateful and petty which ruins my good time.
October 9th, 2009 at 12:13 pm
thats what you get for frezing them.
stupid idiots!
October 9th, 2009 at 12:59 pm
So what’s happeneing to the poor couple who are giving up this child, that isn’t their’s? Do they get their money back or another try at IVF?
October 10th, 2009 at 3:06 am
No, what ever its always a 50/50 chance. There is no fool proof method of sorting x sperm from y sperm. If its that important to have a child of a particular sex then I would question if someone really wanted to parent.
October 9th, 2009 at 8:59 pm
huh? i faceboooked it too
October 10th, 2009 at 11:08 am
You usually order the fertility medications and then you take the shots at home yourself. Your doctor will explain how to use them and when to take them depending on your special needs. Fertility treatments are expensive if you need the shots and don't have insurance, some places offer a discount if you pay out of pocket. I took Gonal F and it costed around $500-$750 depending on the size you need. And my IUI costed $450 x2 each cycle b/c my fertility doctor won't do just one IUI in a cycle.
October 11th, 2009 at 1:00 am
I don't know about fertility clinics in PA – but I can provide you with more info on insurance:
As to insurance – it is not so much about the insurance company as the state that you live in, where your employer is located etc . . . Employers and insurance companies tend to offer the minimum. Currently 15 states in the US mandate some sort of fertility coverage be provided by insurance companies in that state. Unfortunately, Pennsylvania is not one of them . . .
http://www.resolve.org/site/PageServer?pagename=lrn_ic_stintro#Illinois
I also recommend that you contact Fertility Life lines – they have a free hotline that you can call and have someone help you to better understand your coverage and to do an analysis for you. They were great – gave them my policy info and they researched it, got me all of the info on what was and was not covered and explained it to me:
http://www.fertilitylifelines.com/
Capital One also offers health care loans for fertility treatments – I have a few friends who used them without issue:
http://www.capitalonehealthcarefinance.com/fertility/
From going through this personally, I have also found that most fertility clinics have someone on staff who specializes in navigating the insurance, paperwork and finding ways to help you pay including clinical studies and payment plans.
Good luck!
October 11th, 2009 at 9:56 am
We pro life Catholics do have issues with them for this very reason. Ever heard of Snowflake children?
October 11th, 2009 at 6:03 am
1st comment rate and view! OH YA
October 11th, 2009 at 8:11 pm
I agree.
Many of them ARE against IVF though, especially the Catholic church. The difference is that they dont try to legislate against IVF.
True, Bush did only limit federal funding, but he did so because of the plethora of people against the research. And being that an overwhelming majority of all medical research in this country is federally funded, it DID hinder the progress of research here.
Plus, a huge portion of the public are uneducated. They think embryonic stem cells come from abortions, not IVF, nor do they know exactly what is involved in IVF. With Obama approving federal funding, y answers has been over run with stem cell questions, and its amazing how many people think women are now going to be paid to have abortions, when abortion has nothing to do with it.
October 11th, 2009 at 8:22 pm
It varies by who is doing it and what tests/treatments you require. If you have no infertility problems and have chosen to naturally ovulate, the cost should be less than $1,000 plus about $600 for the sperm vial. That is for the first cycle.
If you've chosen to use medicines to ovulate, then the cost goes up, but still should be no more than $3,000 plus sperm vial.
I know a gal who did-it-herself doing the 'turkey baster' method. She had sperm shipped to her and used a needleless syringe to inseminate herself. She is now expecting.
You do get to pick the donor, but how much info you get on the donor depends on the facility. Most donors are anonymous, but have provided considerable medical information. However, that has sometimes proven to be useless as some donors lie about their medical history because this is an income stream (pardon the pun). If you have your own donor in mind, you need to contact a lawyer to protect that person (and yourself) from later legal hassles.
October 11th, 2009 at 1:35 pm
lol ok