Fertility Clock Headlines, Fertility Headlines

Save the Date: National Infertility Awareness Week is April 22-28

RESOLVE, the National Infertility Association, is organizing events nationwide in honor of National Infertility Awareness Week, to be held April 22 to 28 this year. This year’s message is: “Don’t Ignore Infertility.”

Here are some ways you can get involved:

On Wednesday, April 25, RESOLVE is holding Advocacy Day, on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC. The goal will be to “tell your elected officials why they must defend our family-building options.”

For more information about these and other RESOLVE events, go to Resolve.org

 

 

 

Author:
Lorie A. Parch
Fertility Clock Headlines

What young people don’t know about fertility…

embryo

 

We’ve reported before at ConceiveOnline.com about the need for more awareness about fertility issues, and the perception that because some older celebrities can conceive well into their 40s, and even their 50s, that these late-in-life pregnancies are relatively easy to achieve — which is simply not the case for the great majority of women.

Unfortunately, another piece of research is out showing that many of us could use a real-world lesson in fertility. A new study of 246 college students shows that too many young adults may be vastly overestimating how long a woman is likely to be able to conceive, among other misconceptions. The students took a survey that asked them whether they planned to have kids, how much they believed they knew about fertility issues, and where they’d learned this information.

The researchers found that 32 percent of women and 36 percent of men overestimated the age at which women were most fertile. Even more worrisome, “women and men vastly overestimated the age at which women experience a slight decline in their fertility” – 83 percent of women and 91% of men got that wrong. And they also got it wrong when it comes to the age a woman typically experiences a more dramatic decrease in her ability to conceive, and they overestimated the chances that a couple undergoing IVF would become parents after one cycle of treatment.

Because fertility is not taught in schools or elsewhere in any real way, it’s not surprising that so many of these students would get this information wrong (it’s hard to imagine many other adults would know all this information, either). In fact, even as someone TTC, you may not get all the answers right! Here are some of the survey questions, with the correct answers below – are you ready to test yourself?

 

1. At what age are women most fertile?
2. At what age is there a slight decrease in women’s ability to become pregnant?
3. At what age is there a marked decrease in women’s ability to become pregnant?
4. How many couples in the USA are involuntarily childless?
5. Couples that undergo treatment with IVF—what is their chance, on average, of getting a child?

 

How well did you do?

 

ANSWERS:

1. [20-24]

2. [25-29]

3. [35-39]

4. [10-19%]

5. [30-39%]

 

Author:
Lorie A. Parch
Fertility Clock Headlines, Fertility Headlines

Using Traditional Chinese Medicine When You’re Having IUI or IVF

Unfortunately, most fertility patients know all too well the struggle that comes with attempting pregnancy.  They have gone through a profound journey through their emotions, frustrations, and desires. They have coped with the unfortunate side effects of prescribed drugs, not to mention the economic costs. The interesting thing is most patients are unaware of how Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) can help address their fertility.  While modern medicine continues to astound and impress, generally there is a cold and empty climate surrounding the fertility clinic. The patients are not given the time and energy they deserve. While at a TCM clinic, it is the deepest belief that the mind, body, and spirit are one and they all must be addressed to achieve a state of health. Putting both of these kinds of medicine together has shown great success in recent studies. For instance, one study has shown a 26% increase in conception when using IUI (intrauterine insemination) and TCM together.

With these things in mind, I created with my partner Dr. Lisa Metzger a video that explains how TCM and acupuncture work to enhance fertility, and want to share it with ConceiveOnline.com’s readers:

Garden Acupuncture is a leader in fertility and pain management in the Park Slope area of Brooklyn, New York. The clinic uses Acupuncture, Chinese Herbal Therapy, and Nutritional Counseling. For more information, go to Garden Acupuncture online.

Author:
Alex Goldberg, LAc, Dipl. Oriental Medicine
Fertility Clock Blog, My Future Baby Blog

Development of Longer-Acting Injectable Contraceptive; First stage of application due April 30

With support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, FHI 360 has launched a project to support early testing of innovative approaches to developing a longer-acting injectable contraceptive (that lasts 6 to 12 months).  This project is the first step toward bringing a game-changing injectable contraceptive to market, thereby expanding contraceptive access and choice for women around the world.

Fertility Clock Headlines, Fertility Headlines

Sex and Singles: Forty Years Later, We’re Still Fighting Eisenstadt v. Baird

Contraception, used by 99 percent of women at some time in their reproductive lives and approved of by just about everyone except the Catholic bishops and the most extreme social conservatives, has for 40 years been considered a settled issue. The FDA approved the birth control pill in 1960 and in 1965 the Supreme Court affirmed the right to use contraception in Griswold v. Connecticut.

Fertility Clock Headlines

The link between exercise and fertility: How much is too much?

exercise

This is what a recent study set out to discover: the link between physical activity and how long it took for women to get pregnant. The research, which just appeared in the journal Fertility and Sterility, studied 3,600 Danish women between 18 and 40 who were planning to get pregnant and weren’t getting any kind of fertility treatment. They were surveyed over a year about how many hours per week they exercised,  whether their workouts were moderate or vigorous, and whether they got pregnant and if so how long it took them to conceive.

For many women, frequent, vigorous physical activity was associated with taking a longer time to get pregnant. In women under 30 who exercised vigorously less than once a week, the researchers noted 353 pregnancies over the span of the study. For women in the same age group who did vigorous exercise five or more times a week, there were just 85 pregnancies. The fertility rate “was lowest for the women who engaged in 5 or more hours [weekly] of both moderate and vigorous exercise.”

The exception was women who were overweight or obese; for these women, any type of physical activity slightly helped, or at least did not hurt, fertility.

The study also found a modest increase in fertility regardless of a woman’s weight if she did moderate exercise, and concluded that slim women who switch from vigorous exercise to a more moderate intensity while they’re TTC may have more luck getting pregnant sooner.

 

Author:
Lorie A. Parch