Recent Survey Tells What Women Want to
Know About Infertility.
How much do
you know about infertility?
In honor of National Infertility Awareness Week on April 19 - 25, we asked our Facebook readers at Fertility Centers of Illinois to share what they wish others
knew about infertility.
Not exact matches
Sometimes people don't
know what to say when you are talking
about infertility, so they end up saying, well, really dumb things!
In 1996, he published a book for couples called the Dr. Richard Marrs» Fertility Book: America's Leading
Infertility Expert Tells You Everything You Need to
Know About Getting Pregnant.
Whether you've
known for years that you would need a surrogate mother to have a baby or using a surrogate is the next step on your long road of
infertility, it's unsettling to think
about your baby growing inside another woman's body.
If we did, you would have never asked me when I was going to have another baby in the first place, because you would have
known how all
about my struggles with
infertility, and why for me, having a baby isn't...
I don't
know what's worse this Dear Abby advice or the one she gave recently
about going through
infertility.
We
know that many men are not aware of this, so we would like to provide information
about the link between age and male
infertility.
Learn more
about infertility as it relates to adoption and how to
know whether or not you are emotionally ready to adopt.
Learn everything you need to
know about the pre-pregnancy stage, including ovulation and fertility, treating
infertility, and how to detect and increase your chances of getting pregnant.
Virtually all of the women dealt with
infertility in silence and isolation, even when a friend or relative
knew about the woman's difficulty conceiving.
In our study, symptoms of depression occurred in the two weeks before interview and sexual dissatisfaction in the year before interview but, as we don't
know when the period of
infertility occurred, we can not make assumptions
about causality and are in favour of further investigation into the long term impact of
infertility on women's well - being.»
About 19 percent, which is significant and a sad side effect of infertility that many of us don't know a
About 19 percent, which is significant and a sad side effect of
infertility that many of us don't
know aboutabout.
Didn't Drs, especially OBs and
Infertility specialists
know about PCOS in the late 80» s early 90's???!!!!
Whether you need to
know about female or male
infertility, fertility tests or
infertility treatments, all the answers you want can be found right here.
I worried
about osteoporosis and
infertility, but not as much as I vainly worried
about my thinning hair and weight gain
no matter how much I exercised and how little I ate.
I've been following you for years and, after your recent post
about infertility struggles, I've been waiting for this announcement like I
know you in real life.
As founder and director of a licensed adoption agency for nearly 30 yrs, I did in fact hear this question a lot and like you, had mixed feelings because I care
about people and
know the pain and difficulty they go through in grappling with
infertility.
Did they
know nothing
about the pain of
infertility?
Relatively little is
known about how this trait actually influences physiology and health, but the data suggest it does (Lahey, 2009) and it could therefore be of clinical importance to
infertility patients, as well as of psychological significance to their treatment experience.
btw — don't
know if you'd be interested, but I started writing
about my
infertility issues.