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Coping with Infertility by Creating New Holiday Traditions

How New Traditions Can Help You Cope with Infertility During the Holidays

March 27, 2013

Not unlike the winter holidays, Easter and Passover are filled with family-focused events, traditions, memories, and a certain level of expectation to participate in family gatherings. When you’re coping with infertility during the holidays, you may not feel up to visiting with family and friends particularly if there will be children present or you anticipate hearing the dreaded “When are you going to have kids?” question.

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Medical and Social Reasons for Gender Selection

February 12, 2013

Gender selection, despite being a controversial topic, can help couples determine the sex of their child for medical or social reasons. Couples looking to reduce the risk of a sex-linked genetic disease in their children or wishing to balance their family can rely on preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) as the only method proven 99.9% effective for predicting the sex of their child.

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Fertility Clinic Holiday Hours: What You Need to Know to Prepare in Advance

December 19, 2012

When it comes to holiday hours, each fertility clinic operates differently. Some clinics close for a few days or even weeks during the winter holidays. Other clinics maintain morning monitoring hours, but schedule IVF lab procedures for after the New Year. Closing all or a portion of the facility allows treatment staff to spend much needed time with family, gives them the opportunity to catch up on paperwork, and offers down time to thoroughly clean the lab without risking egg or embryo viability.

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Lose Weight, Increase Fertility

November 2, 2012

One third of Americans are overweight, and another one-third are obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Losing weight not only lowers blood pressure and improves blood sugar levels but weight loss is associated with increased fertility potential in women and men.

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Bust a Myth about PGD/PGS

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Weigh the risks and the benefits

Fertility Myths

I'm having in vitro fertilization (IVF) — why not just go ahead and have the embryos genetically screened to make sure there are no chromosomal abnormalities. It’s really no big deal.

Fertility Facts

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When to See an Atlanta Fertility Doctor

Is it time to move on from your Ob/Gyn?

If you are struggling with infertility in Atlanta, you are not alone. Currently, there are over 190,000 people in the Georgia dealing with infertility. Georgia is home to nine fertility clinics, four of which are located in Atlanta. There are about 19 fertility doctors affiliated with these clinics in Atlanta who specialize in infertility.

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Atlanta Fertility Clinic Success Rates

Live birth rates for IVF cycles at Atlanta fertility clinics

When you are looking to choose a fertility clinic, you will undoubtedly turn to success rates to help you make your decision. The Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART) Report, produced by the CDC, is an important tool because it lists the success rates for every fertility clinic in the United States.

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Choosing a Fertility Clinic in Atlanta

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Find the fertility clinic that's right for you

There are four fertility clinics located directly in Atlanta, and another five located throughout the state of Georgia. There are more than 20 fertility doctors that serve these Atlanta fertility clinics, which are either independently owned or operating in conjunction with universities or hospitals.

Atlanta Fertility Clinic Options

Visit the Find a Clinic search on every page of FertilityAuthority.com to find a fertility clinic in Atlanta.

What to Look For When Choosing an Infertility Clinic

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Atlanta Attorneys Offer Legal Assistance in Building Families

Consider working with a lawyer specializing in reproductive law

Fertility treatments can become very complex when a third party is involved — as in the case of egg donation, , or surrogacy. A lawyer who specializes in Reproductive Technology Law, sometimes referred to as Family Building Law, can be important in protecting your interests.

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Donor Egg Success Rates in Atlanta, GA

Live births from frozen and fresh donor egg cycles

The following data from the most recent Assisted Reproductive Technology Report published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), detail the number of donor egg IVF cycles and the number of live births at Atlanta, GA, fertility clinics.

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Using an Egg Donor in Atlanta

Information on egg donation

The majority of donor egg IVF cycles in Georgia have taken place in Atlanta. The most recent Assisted Reproductive Technology Report contains information regarding the types of IVF cycles- fresh, frozen, and donor egg. For a complete list of donor egg IVF cycles in Atlanta, please click here.

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Surrogacy in Atlanta, GA

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What you should know if you're considering surrogacy in Atlanta

Surrogacy is a type of assisted reproduction that utilizes a third party. One woman, the surrogate, will carry a child for the other woman, usually because she cannot conceive a pregnancy or carry a pregnancy to term.

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Infertility Insurance Coverage in Atlanta, GA

Lack of a state mandate affects insurance coverage

Undergoing infertility treatment can be a draining process, both emotionally and financially. If you are looking for your insurance company to help shoulder some of the burden, it is important to research your individual plan to see what exactly it covers.

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Atlanta Infertility Support

A therapist can help you manage stress and emotions that infertility brings

While you are going through your family-building journey, you may find your emotions changing from day to day, or even hour to hour. This is a very emotional time, and you may find yourself split between feeling anger, fear, anxiety, guilt, and sadness, among many others.

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Atlanta, GA, Clinical Trials

Fertility-related research studies in Atlanta, GA

Clinical trials are important in the field of emerging medicine, since they test new medications, procedures, and treatments that can become helpful to a generation of people who suffer from certain disorders. Clinical trials are strictly regulated and controlled, and test a particular variable during the duration of the trial. They may occur simultaneously throughout different locations to utilize a larger sample size.

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Atlanta Fertility Doctor, Fertility Clinic: How to Find One

Is it time for you to find an Atlanta fertility doctor or see which Atlanta fertility clinic makes you feel most comfortable? It probably is if you are over 35 and have been trying to conceive for six months or more — or under 35 and have been trying for a year or more.

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Should You Just Keep Trying if You're Not Getting Pregnant?

By Leigh Ann Woodruff, February 20, 2012

Try, try again. Does that apply when you're having trouble getting pregnant? Maybe.

You've heard it quite a bit. If you're under 35 and haven't been successful getting pregnant after trying for one year, go see a fertility doctor. The same goes for if you're over 35 and haven't been successful after trying for six months.

But now an Australian study has raised questions around that conventional wisdom. The study, published in Fertility and Sterility, found that one in four women with a history of infertility can still end up having a baby without fertility treatment.

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IVF Study: Three Embryos Is Too Many

Two may be better than one for older mothers

Women undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF) who receive three or more embryos have no better odds than those how received two, according to a new study published in the journal Lancet. In addition, there is a greater chance of multiple births, which create more risk for the mother and for the child(ren).

The researchers also say the decision to transfer one or two embryos should be based on prognostic indicators, such as age, and they recommend that fertility doctors seeing a new couple with infertility should move older women to IVF sooner rather than later.

"The authors of the Lancet paper are saying that for patients that are 40 years and older, the ideal target of a single embryo transfer is going to reduce their chances of having a positive outcome," says E. Scott Sills, a fertility doctor with Pacific Reproductive Medicine in Irvine, CA. "The authors are not saying that a number higher than two should be transferred, and I would certainly endorse that viewpoint."

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Fertility Treatment Costs in Atlanta

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What does fertility treatment cost?

The costs associated with the diagnosis and treatment of infertility for Atlanta fertility patients can be extremely high. Fortunately there are some financial options that may lessen the burden for women and men trying to conceive. Ask your Atlanta fertility clinic what options they are offering to help with the cost of fertility treatment.

IVF Refund Programs/Money Back Guarantees

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Emotional Aspects of Infertility for Atlanta Couples

The stress of infertility

One of the most difficult aspects of infertility for couples is the emotional aspect. Studies have shown that the levels of depression and anxiety in infertile women are comparable to levels in cancer patients. And despite the fact that one in six women and their partners have infertility, there is often unnecessary shame and secrecy surrounding it.

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PGD and PGS in Atlanta, GA

What is preimplation genetic diagnosis and preimplantation genetic screening?

Atlanta couples exploring family building options such as in vitro fertilization (IVF), surrogacy, or egg, sperm, or embryo donation, you can have embryos screened with preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) or preimplantation genetic screening (PGS).

PGD and PGS screen embryos for chromosomal abnormalities (extra or missing chromosomes). Geneticists and specialists examine and analyze the embryos and if a problem is found the woman or couple can decide to transfer only the “good” embryos.

Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis (PGD)

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Age and Fertility in Atlanta, GA

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How does age affect fertility?

With more women working and a global recession that has encouraged people to put off starting families, many women in Atlanta, GA, are waiting until their 30s and 40s before they try to get pregnant. In the United States, about 20 percent of women have their first child after age 35. Unfortunately, research has shown that a woman’s fertility begins to decline in her late 20s (even though her overall chances of becoming pregnant do not start to decline so soon).

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Egg Freezing in Atlanta, GA

An option for preserving fertility

Egg freezing, also known as oocyte cryopreservation, has been around for several decades; however, it was not very successful until recently due to a newer process called "vitrification."

Today, egg freezing offers hope to women in Atlanta, GA, facing some types of cancer and/or cancer treatment that may damage their eggs or destroy ovarian function, as well as those who have not found the right partner or who have delayed having children for various reasons.

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