IVF and Optimism Overcome Endometriosis Infertility
onBefore they saw Dr. Hinckley, they thought they might be out of options. After a long struggle with infertility, Tara and Nick underwent IVF at RSC and had two children.
Before they saw Dr. Hinckley, they thought they might be out of options. After a long struggle with infertility, Tara and Nick underwent IVF at RSC and had two children.
Egg freezing provides hope and preserves options for a working professional woman, who then found hope and support at RSCBA while confronting fertility challenges with her partner.
A recent Women’s Health article featured rise of ovarian reserve testing. The test is inexpensive, easy to undergo and has provided insight for many women about the future quantity of eggs. But the test may not be for every woman says Dr. Louis Weckstein, medical director at the Reproductive Science Center in California, in the article.
At RSC, you will see our staff wearing an orange heart pin during National Infertility Awareness Week (NIAW), April 24-30, 2016.
After years of saving for IVF, when Dayy and James found out that his insurance would cover fertility treatments they relied on the doctors and staff at RSC to help them get pregnant.
I have always dreamt of being a mother and started considering single motherhood after decades of unsuccessful relationships. I was afraid of doing it alone until age 35, when a serious relationship I thought was heading toward marriage ended.
When my husband and I met with Dr. Susan Willman, we knew we had found a doctor who was compassionate, but equally skilled, professional and, most importantly to us, honest. I wanted to start the diagnosis and treatment process immediately.
We want to thank Dr. Sgarlata and all of the staff at the San Jose and San Ramon offices for our beautiful baby boy after two rounds of IVF. I was 44 when I started fertility treatments and 45 when I gave birth.
Spurred by an influx of fertility tourists from Asia and low numbers of eggs donated by Asian women, one San Francisco fertility clinic is struggling to keep up with patient demand for ethnic egg donors.
Sarah and Nathan decided to move forward with surrogacy where the Keeneys’ frozen embryo would be implanted into another woman’s uterus to carry the pregnancy to term.