Disability Resource Directory

Fertility / Infertility

 

What is Infertility?

Infertility is defined as the "inability to naturally conceive a child or to carry a pregnancy to full term." The majority of medical experts will not classify a person and/or a couple as infertile until they have been trying for at least a year to get pregnant without any success. Women who find themselves able to become pregnant but then have repeat miscarriages are often classified as being infertile. There are numerous reasons why a couple may find themselves unable to conceive a child and may find it necessary to seek medical assistance in order to do so.

The International Council on Infertility Information Dissemination (INCIID) deems a couple to be infertile if after one year of unprotected intercourse they have not conceived. This drops to six months if the woman is 35 years of age or older. The reason for this is that a woman's fertility takes a drastic drop at the age of 35 and it continues to drop even further after that age. Being able to sustain a pregnancy and carry it to term is important as well so if a woman is unable to do that then she is classified as infertile.

Approximately 10 percent of all individuals of reproductive age are infertile which works out to be 15 percent of couples. On average 40 percent of the time the infertility has to do with the man while 40 percent of the time it has to do with the woman. The rest of the time it can be as a result of both of the sexes. Most healthy couples in their twenties who are having sex on a regular basis have a one in four chance of conceiving a child in any given month of the calendar year. This is what the medical community refers to as "fecundity."

The American Society for Reproductive Medicine estimates that 6.1 million individuals residing in the United States are infertile. As stated above, one third of the time it is due to a male factor, the other third of the time it is a female factor, the problem co-existing between the man and the woman accounts for the problem 15 percent of the time while there are still other instances where the cases of infertility is mysterious and unexplained. This is known as primary infertility.

More Infertility Info

In vitro fertilization (IVF) first came into existence in 1978 although it really did not gain very much attention until 1981 when it was technically first introduced in the United States as a viable means of conceiving a child for infertile couples. According to ASRM and also its affiliate, the Society of Assisted Reproductive the infertility cure Technology (SART) more than 139,000 children have been conceived through IVF between the years 1985 through 2000. As of the conclusion of 2002, approximately 300,000 babies have been born in the United States thanks to Assisted Reproductive Technology methods that include IVF but also GIFT, ZIFT and a combination of procedures.

 

There is also such a thing as secondary infertility and this is when a woman has a difficult time conceiving a child after she has already had a child in the past or previous children with little if any complications at all. Sometimes this is attributed to a medical condition such as a hormonal problem but it could also be a problem that is connected with age or else as the result of mental stress and strain to make sure that the first child has a brother or sister. If the woman has changed partners and is now having a problem getting pregnant this is not attributed to secondary infertility.


There are also instances where a woman's ovaries have not matured to a point where they can release eggs every month as they are supposed to. When this happens, injections of synthetic FSH can be administered in order to stimulate the eggs to properly mature in the ovaries.

Current Infertility News

09/02/2010
Research helps explain infertility in older women
Scientists have made a major step towards understanding why older women are more likely to produce abnormal eggs.

Research helps explain infertility in older women

09/02/2010
Generations of Hope Fertility Assistance Fund: Family Fun Day Brings Awareness to Infertility Issues in Canada
CALGARY, ALBERTA-- (Marketwire - Sept. 2, 2010) - Calgary-based Generations of Hope Fertility Assistance Fund will be hosting their second annual Family Fun Day at Canada Olympic Park on Saturday, September 18, 2010 from 11am to 3pm. Admission is free and organizers hope Calgary families will come out to the event to celebrate family and to support the 1 in 6 couples challenged with infertility ...

Generations of Hope Fertility Assistance Fund: Family Fun Day Brings Awareness to Infertility Issues in Canada

09/03/2010
New insight into infertility in older women
Scientists now are closer to understanding why older women become less fertile, suffer a miscarriage or have a baby with Down's syndrome. This could be ground breaking in infertility treatment in the older women in their late 30s and early 40s.

New insight into infertility in older women

09/03/2010
Revealed: why risk of infertility and birth defects rises with age
Women who discover they cannot have children after trying to start a family too late have been given new hope by scientists in a major advance in understanding the causes of infertility.

Revealed: why risk of infertility and birth defects rises with age

09/05/2010
Why older women are more prone to fertility problems
London, Sep 5 : Scientists have discovered why women are more likely to suffer from miscarriages and infertility problems if they try to have babies later in life.

Why older women are more prone to fertility problems

09/06/2010
Talk about double vision: 17 sets of twins in Alabaster's Creek View Elementary School (with slideshow)
Teachers must have wondered if they were having vision problems when school started about a month ago. They were seeing double, but they weren't hallucinating.

Talk about double vision: 17 sets of twins in Alabaster's Creek View Elementary School (with slideshow)


Infertility
What is Infertility?
Fertile or Infertile?
Infertility FAQ Part 1
Infertility FAQ Part 2
Fertility Testing for Women
Is Infertility a Woman's Problem?
Treating Infertility - Try and Try Again?
A Look at In Vitro Fertilization
Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART)
Fertility/Infertility Resources
Birth - Pregnancy

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