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One in every 30 babies born in the U.S. is a twin — an astounding increase over the last three decades, according to a government report issued Wednesday. In 1980, only 1 in every 53 babies was a twin.
When people say it seems like you see more twins nowadays, they are right,said Joyce Martin, an epidemiologist who co-authored the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report.
About 7 percent of all births for women 40 and older were twins, compared to 5 percent of women in their late 30s and 2 percent of women age 24 or younger.
Read more: Older mothers, fertility treatments driving a big increase in twin births
TODAY'S BOOK SUGGESTION:
by Dermot O'Connor
-- The Fertility Code program delivers a powerful and practical step-by-step approach for those who wish to give themselves the best chance of starting a family.
As many as 500,000 couples in the UK and Ireland actively seek help with fertility, such as IVF treatment each year. While some are legitimate candidates, many have been proven to just need proper lifestyle and fertility advice and assistance in order to conceive.
The Fertility Code is designed for these people, and for those who need more serious intervention, to optimize their fertility. There are a variety of factors that can contribute to preventing a couple from having a baby.
This is why it is important that a fertility plan should address as many of these potential issues as possible. Through many years' experience of helping thousands of couples to become parents, Dermot O'Connor knows that such a plan must be easy to understand, easy to implement and genuinely effective.
The Fertility Code combines the best of both Eastern and Western medicine to provide a comprehensive guide to conceiving successfully and carrying a baby to full term.
It details the optimum plan to enhance fertility, and delivers a proven strategy, incorporating the key elements consistently utilized by the couples Dermot has helped:
• Fertility Awareness Strategies
• The psychology of fertility
• Optimum nutrition for conception and pregnancy
• The importance of detoxification

Click to order/for more info: The Fertility Code

Don't have a Kindle? Get your Kindle here, or download a FREE Kindle Reading App.

They also have a greater chance of risky multiple births.
"Women who have gone through infertility treatment want the best chance of having a baby, but we need to explain that the data shows transferring more embryos doesn't actually do that," said Dr. Scott Nelson, head of reproductive and maternal medicine at the University of Glasgow, who co-authored the study published in Thursday's issue of Lancet.
For women over 40, the live birth rate was 13 percent whether they had two or three embryos transferred.
Read rest of article
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Stories of Pregnancy and Birth over 44 years old - sharing news stories I find online, for inspiration!

Pacific Fertility Center has been taking steps to minimize the risk of multiple gestation for several years. "We have worked actively to increase pregnancy rates and decrease the number of multiples," comments Carolyn Givens, M.D. "Balancing high pregnancy rates with low pregnancy risk improves pregnancy outcomes. Thus, achieving this balance and reducing the risk of multiple gestation is our goal."
Read more...
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Found this on FertilityFriend today:
In the final sample, there were 224 singletons, 135 twins, and 32 triplets. Baseline HCG concentrations were significantly higher for twins and triplets compared to singletons (P greater than 0.0001) and for triplets compared to twins (P greater than 0.0001). The patients were predominantly Caucasian and nulliparous, and had an average of 3.01 ± 0.86 (range 1–6) embryos replaced at the time of transfer. Linear regression analysis of the initial values of log (HCG) were significantly influenced by the number of gestational sacs (P greater than 0.0001) and maternal body mass index (BMI) (P = 0.01).
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Jennifer asked: A thought occurred to me last night while I was trying to go to sleep about beta numbers.
I am 5' 10" and a size 16.... My best friend is 5' 0" and a size "zero". Considering that a smaller person like my friend has a lower total blood volume than someone larger like myself wouldn't the concentration of hcg be different even if we happened to be the same dpo [days past ovulation] and pregnant? Wouldn't the concentration be stronger (higher beta #'s) in a smaller person than in a bigger person, since the concentration would be different because of the different amounts of total blood volume in our bodies?
Catherine posted the following research study:
Defining the rise of serum HCG in viable pregnancies achieved through use of IVF
In the final sample, there were 224 singletons, 135 twins, and 32 triplets. Baseline HCG concentrations were significantly higher for twins and triplets compared to singletons (P greater than 0.0001) and for triplets compared to twins (P greater than 0.0001). The patients were predominantly Caucasian and nulliparous, and had an average of 3.01 ± 0.86 (range 1–6) embryos replaced at the time of transfer. Linear regression analysis of the initial values of log (HCG) were significantly influenced by the number of gestational sacs (P greater than 0.0001) and maternal body mass index (BMI) (P = 0.01).
HCG levels were higher among twins and triplets compared to singletons, and lower among women with greater BMI. In the multivariable regression, there was no independent effect of number of embryos transferred, use of ICSI [intracytoplasmic sperm injection], or use of AH [Assisted hatching] on initial log (HCG) values. Infertility centre was also analysed as an independent variable and was found to have no significant effect.
We also observed that HCG concentrations were significantly lower among obese women (BMI greater than 30 kg/m2) compared to normal-weight women, but rates of increase were similar. Physiological mechanisms underlying this finding are speculative, but may be related to the fat tissue’s capacity to act as a steroid hormone reservoir and site of hormone metabolism (Deslypere et al., 1985).
Source: http://humrep.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/21/3/823
Source: http://humrep.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/21/3/823
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http://pregnancyover44y.blogspot.com/
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http://pregnancyover44y.blogspot.com/
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A doctor is silhouetted as he walks past a poster showing images of the development of a human fetus at a fertility clinic.
In Brief:
5 Despite continuing refinements in fertility treatments, researchers have not been able to provide what career-minded adults seek: an extension of the years in which a woman is fertile.
5 The viability of conventionally frozen eggs is still inferior to that of frozen sperm and embryos.
5 The freezing of ovarian tissue, still highly experimental, may offer new options to cancer patients facing sterilizing treatments.
With genetic abnormalities in many embryos correcting themselves by day five, clinics are waiting longer to transfer embryos into patients.
In the nearly 30 years since Louise Brown made history as the first test-tube baby, more than one million infants have been conceived by means of in vitro fertilization. Assisted reproductive technologies continue to advance, but increasingly they are pushing against one of nature’s great barriers to fertility: maternal age.
“Many infertility specialists are surprised by the number of otherwise highly educated older couples with unrealistic expectations of fertility,” Dr. Bradley J. Van Voorhis, a fertility expert at the University of Iowa School of Medicine, wrote recently in The New England Journal of Medicine. “The negative effect of a woman’s age on fertility cannot be overemphasized.”
Certainly, new options to extend fertility are testing the limits of who can get pregnant, and when. They are also raising fresh medical, economic and ethical concerns.
Whereas scientists for decades have been freezing human embryos for later implantation into the womb, now a process called vitrification enables technicians to flash-freeze unfertilized human eggs in a matter of seconds, greatly improving their survival rates.
The process is considered superior to conventional slow-freezing methods because it prevents the formation of ice crystals in the egg that could damage DNA. Sperm later meets thawed egg through in vitro fertilization, and the resulting embryo is implanted in the womb. The technique increases the chances of successful pregnancy later in life for a young woman without a partner who must, or wants to, defer starting a family.
“I think this will emancipate women as much as the birth control pill did in 1960,” said Dr. Sherman Silber, a fertility specialist in St. Louis, Mo., one of a limited number of doctors in the country to offer the novel procedure. In a recent study in Spain, there were no differences in pregnancy rates in women undergoing in vitro fertilization with embryos from either fresh or flash-frozen eggs. About 45 percent in each group conceived.
The experimental procedure, however, is not without its sacrifices — and skeptics. Potent drugs must be used to stimulate a patient’s ovaries, and then the eggs must be aspirated while she is sedated. Vitrification is also expensive, often more than $5,000 just for freezing the eggs, in addition to the cost of fertilization.
Vitrification may improve the odds that older women will be able to conceive from eggs that they donated when they were younger, but it doesn’t offer much help to middle-aged women whose eggs were never frozen. There’s little point in a woman preserving her eggs if she’s over 35 years old, when fertility starts to diminish. The younger the eggs, the better their quality.
Still, many fertility centers limit egg-freezing services only to younger cancer patients facing treatments that will leave them sterile. Patients usually are warned that frozen eggs are not as reliable as frozen embryos and sperm because of the egg’s extreme sensitivity to temperature.
“I’ve had to tell young women facing cancer treatment and the loss of ovarian function that it’s not really reliable,” said Dr. Richard Marrs, managing partner of California Fertility Partners in Los Angeles. “The odds are better for them if they freeze embryos.”
Trying to improve the odds, some researchers, including Dr. Silber, have begun freezing not only eggs but ovarian tissue as well. Thin slices from the ovary are removed through a small incision below the navel, preserved with slow freezing, then transplanted back into the woman’s body when she’s ready to try to get pregnant, in some cases years later. The aim is to have the tissue grow and start functioning again, triggering normal ovulation cycles and eventually leading to conception.
The American Society for Reproductive Medicine has acknowledged the potential of frozen eggs and ovarian tissues, but for now recommends these experimental techniques only for younger women undergoing cancer treatments, not for those postponing pregnancy for lifestyle reasons like pursuing a career. “The biological clock is real for most women, and that has to be recognized,” said Sean Tipton, a spokesman for the society.
More widely used fertility techniques that were developed to improve the odds of a successful pregnancy in older women, like pre-implantation genetic diagnosis, or P.G.D., are not without their controversies, too. Developed about a decade ago to weed out embryos with genetic abnormalities prior to implantation, P.G.D. might one day help parents select not just a child’s gender, but perhaps his eye color or other characteristics.
Many reputable clinics find it a slippery ethical slope and employ the procedure only on a limited basis. “We use P.G.D., but we’re very selective when we use it,” Dr. Marrs said. “The prime reason to do it is if you have a family history of single gene disorders like Tay-Sachs, Huntington’s chorea, cystic fibrosis.”
Furthermore, critics claim, P.G.D. may have resulted in clinics discarding healthy embryos. Several studies have shown that many genetic abnormalities appearing in a three-day-old embryo correct themselves by the fifth day. As a result of this finding, a number of clinics now wait until the fifth day to test and transfer embryos into the woman’s uterus. Doctors also tend to transfer fewer of them, thereby reducing the incidence of multiple births and its attendant complications, including premature labor and low birth weight.
Despite these refinements in assisted reproductive technologies, fertility scientists have not been able to change the basic fact that a woman’s fertility diminishes with age.
“The younger the woman, the better her chances of fertility,” said Dr. Zev Rosenwaks, director of The Center for Reproductive Medicine and Infertility at New York-Presbyterian Hospital. “If there are any signs of infertility — absence of periods, irregular periods — couples should pay attention. Seek help earlier rather than later.”
TODAY'S BOOK SUGGESTION:
How the Science of Egg Quality Can Help You Get Pregnant Naturally, Prevent Miscarriage, and Improve Your Odds in IVF
by Rebecca Fett
-- Whether you are trying to conceive naturally or through IVF, the quality of your eggs will have a powerful impact on how long it takes you to get pregnant and whether you face an increased risk of miscarriage.
Poor egg quality is emerging as the single most important cause of age-related infertility, recurrent miscarriage, and failed IVF cycles. It is also a major contributor to infertility in PCOS.
Based on a comprehensive investigation of a vast array of scientific research, It Starts with the Egg reveals a groundbreaking new approach for improving egg quality and fertility.
With a concrete strategy including minimizing exposure to toxins such as BPA and phthalates, choosing the right vitamins and supplements to safeguard developing eggs, and harnessing nutritional advice shown to boost IVF success rates, this book offers practical solutions to will help you get pregnant faster and deliver a healthy baby.

Click to order/for more info: It Starts with the Egg

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Washington , Dec 31 (ANI): A revolutionary in vitro fertilisation (IVF) test, which may slash the risk of multiple births while increasing the chances of pregnancy, will soon be offered to British couples.
The pre-implantation genetic screening (PGS) test aims to boost the success rates when only a single embryo is transplanted into the womb, so that multiple pregnancies may be prevented.
However, a different form of PGS is already licensed to detect chromosomal abnormalities that cause embryos to fail, but only for older patients or those with a history of miscarriage or IVF failure.
The PGS test is also controversial with almost no proof to establish the fact that it aids in conception. It was recently reported that the British Fertility Society had recommended that its members stop using it.
In the more advanced version of PGS, around 50-100 women will be recruited. It will be conducted by Dagan Wells, of the Reprogenetics UK clinic and the University of Oxford .
Wells is seeking permission from the fertility regulator for the test, with a view to identifying the best embryo produced by young IVF patients aged under 35 having good prognosis.
If successful, the trial may influence many more infertile couples into opting for single embryos, corresponding to the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority's strategy to cut IVF twin and triplet births from one in four to one in ten.
At present, almost 90 per cent of IVF cycles use two embryos, because clinics and couples fear that the pregnancy rates may decline by using just one embryo.
I think this is going to be a wonderful thing for moving towards single embryo transfer. If you're only going to put back one embryo, its more important than ever that you get the best one, and that is what we think this test can do, Times Online quoted Dr Wells as saying.
The new technique has been used on three women in America and two of them are now pregnant.
The PGS aims to identify chromosomal abnormalities called aneuploidies, which affect up to two thirds of embryos and cause implantation failure or miscarriage.
It is dependent on three new technologies, and comes with improved accuracy and lower risk.
Source: http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/health/novel-ivf-test-may-cut-risk-of-twins-triplets_10010842.html
The pre-implantation genetic screening (PGS) test aims to boost the success rates when only a single embryo is transplanted into the womb, so that multiple pregnancies may be prevented.
However, a different form of PGS is already licensed to detect chromosomal abnormalities that cause embryos to fail, but only for older patients or those with a history of miscarriage or IVF failure.
The PGS test is also controversial with almost no proof to establish the fact that it aids in conception. It was recently reported that the British Fertility Society had recommended that its members stop using it.
In the more advanced version of PGS, around 50-100 women will be recruited. It will be conducted by Dagan Wells, of the Reprogenetics UK clinic and the University of Oxford .
Wells is seeking permission from the fertility regulator for the test, with a view to identifying the best embryo produced by young IVF patients aged under 35 having good prognosis.
If successful, the trial may influence many more infertile couples into opting for single embryos, corresponding to the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority's strategy to cut IVF twin and triplet births from one in four to one in ten.
At present, almost 90 per cent of IVF cycles use two embryos, because clinics and couples fear that the pregnancy rates may decline by using just one embryo.
I think this is going to be a wonderful thing for moving towards single embryo transfer. If you're only going to put back one embryo, its more important than ever that you get the best one, and that is what we think this test can do, Times Online quoted Dr Wells as saying.
The new technique has been used on three women in America and two of them are now pregnant.
The PGS aims to identify chromosomal abnormalities called aneuploidies, which affect up to two thirds of embryos and cause implantation failure or miscarriage.
It is dependent on three new technologies, and comes with improved accuracy and lower risk.
Source: http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/health/novel-ivf-test-may-cut-risk-of-twins-triplets_10010842.html
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4,250 Stories of Pregnancy & Birth over 44y
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A government agency that regulates UK fertility clinics has called for a national strategy to reduce the number of multiple births that occur after fertility treatment. One way of reducing multiple births is to reduce the administration of fertility drugs, which would drive down sales volume. However, this could result in more IVF cycles and may ultimately lead to higher revenues in the sector.
The Human Fertilization and Embryology Authority (HFEA), a governmental authority that regulates and inspects all UK fertility clinics that provide assisted reproductive technology (ART), has called for a national strategy to reduce the number of multiple births that occur after fertility treatment. Almost 40,000 British women will have infertility treatment in 2007, and more than a quarter of in vitro fertilization (IVF) conceptions result in multiple births, which are far more likely to result in premature or other forms of problematic births.
The potential negative consequences of multiple births
Many assisted pregnancies have led to multiple births following excessive follicular stimulation in ovulation induction cycles and multiple embryo transfers, which are practiced in order to increase the chances of success. European and US registries of assisted reproduction indicate that 25% of IVF and intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) cycles result in twins and another 3-5% result in higher order multiple pregnancies. In addition to the potentially fatal ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS), multiple pregnancies have been associated with a statistical increase in maternal risk for obstetric complications, congenital malformations and long-term neurological conditions, and lower gestational age and birth weight.
The wider implications of multiple births must also be considered. The healthcare costs of neonatal and delivery services are increased for multiple pregnancies and the pressure of raising more than one child can generate familial complications of a psychological, social and financial nature which are further exacerbated by disability.
These concerns over mother and baby safety have seen a move towards milder stimulation protocols in recent years and Datamonitor predicts that this trend is set to continue. Shorter stimulation protocols involve a gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonist co-treatment with a low-dose gonadotropin and single rather than multiple embryo transfer. The HFEA has announced that they expect multiple birth rates to fall so that they account for just 10% of all IVF pregnancies and have called on professional bodies to develop an all-encompassing, national strategy to ensure this prediction is met. Work on these guidelines is due to begin immediately and with the first discussion scheduled in February 2008, change for the UK infertility market is imminent.
Winners and losers
There are around 80 clinics in the UK that offer some form of infertility treatment. While 30% are NHS practices, private patients can also be treated there. The market is boosted by partial reimbursement of treatment, making assisted reproductive technology (ART) accessible to more than just the very wealthy. Datamonitor estimates that in 2007, 38,000 British women were willing and able to have infertility treatment and based on this, forecasts the UK infertility drug market to be worth around $95 million. Additionally, Datamonitor forecasts the seven major markets (the US, Japan, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK) combined to be worth $3.5 billion in 2007, the majority of which is generated by three large pharmaceutical companies: Ferring, Merck Serono and Organon.
A reduction in the number of multiple births will have several impacts on current treatment cycles. The transfer of a single embryo is likely to be enforced and the use of mild stimulation protocols is likely to become more widespread. Market players will feel the result of a reduction in the administration of gonadotrophins as a reduction in sales volume. However, the shorter stimulation protocol and the transfer of a single embryo may allow more IVF cycles to be conducted within the same period of time as conventional treatment. More cycles will require more drugs and with careful management of pricing and reimbursement strategies, revenue may even increase.
A key consideration in this debate is the infertile couples themselves. For some, the desire to conceive may be so great that they are willing to risk the complications of a multiple pregnancy. Others will prefer the safer, faster and less expensive mild stimulation protocol, and the ethics of removing a patient's choice must be considered. In Belgium, as a result of savings made in reducing multiple births, a reimbursement system has been funded which allows couples six IVF/ICSI cycles in a lifetime. Results the first year after implementation show an increase in the total number of treatment cycles is advantageous for the industry and patients alike.
Other market forces
As infertility treatment becomes more accessible, the improving success rates of IVF treatment across key markets will continue to boost the number of cycles initiated. As a European expert told Datamonitor: "As IVF becomes a more standard procedure, the more confident we become that these children are doing well, the more it will be liberally employed."
Additionally, a range of embryological techniques, such as in vitro maturation, cryopreservation and microarrays are currently being refined and will rapidly expand the treatable patient population as all women with the intention of preserving and protecting embryos will be eligible for treatment, not just those that are infertile. The trend towards later parenthood will also increase the number of women eligible for infertility treatment. Given these factors, growth of the infertility market looks certain. With careful monitoring of the regulations called for by the HFEA, the trend towards single births has the potential to benefit both the patient and infertility industry while delivering the ultimate goal, a much desired, healthy child.
Source: http://www.pharmaceutical-business-review.com/article_feature.asp?guid=60991E20-1D6E-4209-A71A-D99DC3CF843E
The Human Fertilization and Embryology Authority (HFEA), a governmental authority that regulates and inspects all UK fertility clinics that provide assisted reproductive technology (ART), has called for a national strategy to reduce the number of multiple births that occur after fertility treatment. Almost 40,000 British women will have infertility treatment in 2007, and more than a quarter of in vitro fertilization (IVF) conceptions result in multiple births, which are far more likely to result in premature or other forms of problematic births.
The potential negative consequences of multiple births
Many assisted pregnancies have led to multiple births following excessive follicular stimulation in ovulation induction cycles and multiple embryo transfers, which are practiced in order to increase the chances of success. European and US registries of assisted reproduction indicate that 25% of IVF and intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) cycles result in twins and another 3-5% result in higher order multiple pregnancies. In addition to the potentially fatal ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS), multiple pregnancies have been associated with a statistical increase in maternal risk for obstetric complications, congenital malformations and long-term neurological conditions, and lower gestational age and birth weight.
The wider implications of multiple births must also be considered. The healthcare costs of neonatal and delivery services are increased for multiple pregnancies and the pressure of raising more than one child can generate familial complications of a psychological, social and financial nature which are further exacerbated by disability.
These concerns over mother and baby safety have seen a move towards milder stimulation protocols in recent years and Datamonitor predicts that this trend is set to continue. Shorter stimulation protocols involve a gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonist co-treatment with a low-dose gonadotropin and single rather than multiple embryo transfer. The HFEA has announced that they expect multiple birth rates to fall so that they account for just 10% of all IVF pregnancies and have called on professional bodies to develop an all-encompassing, national strategy to ensure this prediction is met. Work on these guidelines is due to begin immediately and with the first discussion scheduled in February 2008, change for the UK infertility market is imminent.
Winners and losers
There are around 80 clinics in the UK that offer some form of infertility treatment. While 30% are NHS practices, private patients can also be treated there. The market is boosted by partial reimbursement of treatment, making assisted reproductive technology (ART) accessible to more than just the very wealthy. Datamonitor estimates that in 2007, 38,000 British women were willing and able to have infertility treatment and based on this, forecasts the UK infertility drug market to be worth around $95 million. Additionally, Datamonitor forecasts the seven major markets (the US, Japan, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK) combined to be worth $3.5 billion in 2007, the majority of which is generated by three large pharmaceutical companies: Ferring, Merck Serono and Organon.
A reduction in the number of multiple births will have several impacts on current treatment cycles. The transfer of a single embryo is likely to be enforced and the use of mild stimulation protocols is likely to become more widespread. Market players will feel the result of a reduction in the administration of gonadotrophins as a reduction in sales volume. However, the shorter stimulation protocol and the transfer of a single embryo may allow more IVF cycles to be conducted within the same period of time as conventional treatment. More cycles will require more drugs and with careful management of pricing and reimbursement strategies, revenue may even increase.
A key consideration in this debate is the infertile couples themselves. For some, the desire to conceive may be so great that they are willing to risk the complications of a multiple pregnancy. Others will prefer the safer, faster and less expensive mild stimulation protocol, and the ethics of removing a patient's choice must be considered. In Belgium, as a result of savings made in reducing multiple births, a reimbursement system has been funded which allows couples six IVF/ICSI cycles in a lifetime. Results the first year after implementation show an increase in the total number of treatment cycles is advantageous for the industry and patients alike.
Other market forces
As infertility treatment becomes more accessible, the improving success rates of IVF treatment across key markets will continue to boost the number of cycles initiated. As a European expert told Datamonitor: "As IVF becomes a more standard procedure, the more confident we become that these children are doing well, the more it will be liberally employed."
Additionally, a range of embryological techniques, such as in vitro maturation, cryopreservation and microarrays are currently being refined and will rapidly expand the treatable patient population as all women with the intention of preserving and protecting embryos will be eligible for treatment, not just those that are infertile. The trend towards later parenthood will also increase the number of women eligible for infertility treatment. Given these factors, growth of the infertility market looks certain. With careful monitoring of the regulations called for by the HFEA, the trend towards single births has the potential to benefit both the patient and infertility industry while delivering the ultimate goal, a much desired, healthy child.
Source: http://www.pharmaceutical-business-review.com/article_feature.asp?guid=60991E20-1D6E-4209-A71A-D99DC3CF843E
Stories of Pregnancy & Birth over 44y
- Daily blog of hope & inspiration!
4,200 Stories of Pregnancy & Birth over 44y
All the stories, divided by age, 1st pregnancy & high FSH!
"In 2005, there were more than 104,000 births in the United States to women ages 40 through 44, and over 6,500 to women 45 and older. In 2004, there were 1,786 live births to women over 42, using donor eggs."
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