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         Infertility Family Science:     more books (48)
  1. Childless: No Choice: The Experience of Involuntary Childlessness by James H. Monach, 1993-05-10
  2. In Vitro Fertilization by Andrea Bonnicksen, 1989-10-15
  3. Fertility and Familial Power Relations: Procreation in South India (Nais Monograph Series, 87) by Minna Saavala, 2001-11-02
  4. The Rise of Viagra: How the Little Blue Pill Changed Sex in America (Sociology) by Meika Loe, 2006-03-01
  5. Barren in the Promised Land: Childless Americans and the Pursuit of Happiness by Elaine T. May, 1997-04-25
  6. Gamete Quality and Fertility Regulation: (International Congress Series) by Rolland, 1985
  7. Human in Vitro Fertilization: (International Congress Series) by Testart, 1985-01
  8. Current Knowledge in Reproductive Medicine by Brazil) World Congress on Human Reproduction 1999 (Salvador, Elsimar M. Coutinho, et all 2000-09-01
  9. Dear Barbara, Dear Lynne: The True Story of Two Women in Search of Motherhood by Barbara Shulgold, Lynne Sipiora, 1992-10
  10. Assisted Human Reproductive Technology (Reproductive Health Technology)
  11. Physiology & Toxicology Of Male Reproduction by JAMES ED. LAMB, 1988
  12. Women without Children: Nurturing Lives by Yvonne Marie Vissing, 2002-04-02
  13. Advances in Clinical Andrology
  14. The Fertility Sourcebook, Third Edition by M. Sara Rosenthal, M. S. Rosenthal MS, et all 2002-06-27

41. UNTSHC Clinic Digital Library
Patient/family Resources by Topic Gynecology. Female infertility Patient/familyResources. Spanish Miscellaneous. See also
http://unthsc-dl.slis.ua.edu/patientinfo/gynecology/femaleinfertility.htm
Patient/Family Resources by Topic: Gynecology
Female Infertility Patient/Family Resources
Spanish Miscellaneous See also:

42. - Science Makes Miracle Babies: Louise Brown
Today IVF is the most common of the hightech infertility treatments, accounting for Now if science gets out of hand and uses this technology for imoral
http://www.babycenter.com/general/9811.html
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Preconception
Pregnancy Baby Toddler ... BabyCenter Store Savings Babies of the Century Credit: CORBIS/Bettmann Louise Brown In 1978, British baby Louise Brown was born. She was conceived with a little help from a then experimental reproductive process called in vitro fertilization WHERE IS SHE NOW?
Brown, 21, lives in England and works at a daycare center. Were she given the option to have a baby by IVF herself, Brown says she'd pass it up. Today IVF is the most common of the high-tech infertility treatments, accounting for more than 70 percent of all assisted reproductive technology (ART) procedures.
previous
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"Hello, Have a very good,beautifull and loving spring!

43. Infertility Counselors
Strong Fertility and Reproductive science Center. Counselors Specializing inInfertility. Susan H. McDaniel, Ph.D. Susan H. McDaniel, Ph.D., if a professor
http://www.stronghealth.com/services/womenshealth/ivf/infoseekers/counselorbios.
@import "/css/Strongw3c.css"; Search: Search Help Fertility For People Seeking Options Home Case Scenarios Emotional Concerns Finances of Fertility ... Donor Lists For Current Patients Home Taking Care of Yourself Tests Treatments and Procedures ... Forms For Egg and Sperm Donors Home Qualifications for Donors Donor List Our Team Home More Information IVF News
Strong Fertility and Reproductive Science Center
Counselors Specializing in Infertility
Susan H. McDaniel, Ph.D.
Susan H. McDaniel, Ph.D., if a professor or Psychiatry (Psychology) and Family Medicine, director of Family Programs, and director of the Wayne Center for Family Research at the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry. Dr. McDaniel earned her doctorate in clinical psychology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She did her internship at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, and her postdoctoral training in family therapy at the Texas Research Institute for Mental Sciences at the Texas Medical Center in Houston. Dr. McDaniel is a diplomat in Family Psychology from the American Board of Professional Psychology and a fellow of the American Psychological Association. Dr. McDaniel is the past chair of the Commission on Accreditation for Marriage and Family Therapy Education, the past President of the Division of Family Psychology of the American Psychological Association, the 1995 Family Psychologist of the Year, and was the first psychologist in 1998 to be a fellow of the Public Health Service Primary Care Policy Fellowship in Washington DC. She is the past recipient of the Innovative Contributions to Family Therapy from the American Family Therapy Academy.

44. RSC Bay Area - Home Page
Gynecological and infertility medical services include IVF, GIFT, TET, ICSI, Reproductive science Center The largest East Bay Fertility Program
http://www.rscbayarea.com/
Home About RSC Success Rates Request an Appointment ... Contact Us "Experience has never mattered more!" Press the Play button to listen to our commerical Millions of couples suffer from infertility, the inability to achieve pregnancy after a year of trying to conceive. But there is hope: Advanced techniques can help diagnose the cause of a couple's infertility and indicate the best way to treat it. We can often help an infertile couple start or grow a family even when the cause remains unknown. Our center consists of five physicians specializing in infertility care , a laboratory staff with over 25 years experience in assisted reproductive technologies, a supportive, patient-focused staff , and one of the largest in vitro fertilization centers in California. Our San Ramon, Orinda, San Jose and Fremont offices all offer evaluation and cycle monitoring. Oocyte Retrievals and Embryo Transfers are performed at our San Ramon office, the site of our Operating Room and Embryology Laboratory. Our doctors are trained in reproductive endocrinology, infertility, and gynecology, and specialize in assisted reproduction. The information provided at this Web site is not intended to be a substitute for medical advice. If you are seeking diagnostic services or medical attention, you should consult a physician.

45. Center For Applied Reproductive Science
APPROACH TO infertility. Demographics and Epidemiology. The traditional definitionof infertility is twelve months of unprotected sexual intercourse without
http://www.ivf-et.com/tlc/fact_infertility.html
HOME glossary The Learning Center contact us ... HOME APPROACH TO INFERTILITY
Demographics and Epidemiology The traditional definition of infertility is twelve months of unprotected sexual intercourse without establishing a successful pregnancy. This definition was derived in studies showing that 90% of couples will achieve a pregnancy during that time frame. Approximately 50% of otherwise healthy reproductive age women should be pregnant in the first three or four months of attempts. About 70% should be pregnant by six months and of the remaining 10% not pregnant after twelve months, still about one third will become pregnant in the following two years. It is, however, an injustice to our patients not to discuss of fertility at routine health visits, or to wait a year before starting education and counseling. It seems perfunctory to begin any discussion of infertility by stating that about one in six American couples is infertile. The true incidence of infertility is not known. It is estimated that over 50% of infertile couples never seek therapy. When taking medical histories for problems unrelated to infertility, it is commonplace to hear of years of attempts before a pregnancy is successfully established or in between pregnancies. A useful exercise is to imagine 50% of the couples with no children are childless not by choice.

46. Center For Applied Reproductive Science
Tennessee infertility clinic. North Carolina infertility clinic CARS Centerfor Applied Reproductive science Johnson City,TN (423) 461-8880
http://www.ivf-et.com/tlc/links_infertility.html
HOME glossary The Learning Center contact us ... HOME Links - Infertility
American Infertility Association (AIA)

The American Infertility Association is a national nonprofit patient advocacy organization with numerous services. The AIA is a comprehensive resource for information about infertility, reproductive disease and adoption. The AIA has a monthly national newsletter and support through a toll free support line at 888 917 3777. American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM)
Center for Disease Control - Reproductive Health
Fertile Thoughts

A patient oriented forum for family building. Fertility Retreats
A holistic mind-body approach to infertility and life beyond fertility. INCIID
The InterNational Council on Infertility Information Dissemination (INCIID-pronounced "inside") is an internet based nonprofit organization committed to providing the current information regarding the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of infertility and pregnancy loss. Good adoption resources. IVF Connections
IVF Connections connects people going through IVF to information, support, and others going through the same experiences. IVF Connections features IVF bulletin boards, IVF questions and answers, IVF stories, IVF links for the U.S. and Canada.

47. Infertility - Adoption Encyclopedia
The infertility may be correctable by modern and often expensive techniques, (Professionals included people in management, science, social science,
http://encyclopedia.adoption.com/entry/infertility/184/1.html
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encyclopedia of adoption
infertility Most people who adopt infants, are infertile or believe themselves to be infertile. The infertility may be correctable by modern and often expensive techniques, may be a more serious problem requiring surgery, may be incurable or may be of undetermined causes, in which case the situation is called "unexplained infertility." Despite dramatic newspaper stories about a skyrocketing infertility rate, experts at the National Center for Health Statistics say the infertility rate is about the same as it was years ago. The reason infertility is highlighted today is primarily because of large numbers of "Baby Boomer" couples who delayed childbearing until their late twenties or their thirties and now have decided to start a family. (Fertility declines with age. For more information, see FERTILITY RATES There are probably also a greater percentage of individuals seeking treatment, aware of a variety of fertility treatments available today that were unknown a decade ago.

48. New Arab Demography Publications
(2000) “Unmet need for family planning in developing countries and implications for ­­­El Saadani, Somaya (2003) “infertility Problem in Egypt A Hidden
http://www.aucegypt.edu/src/New_Arab_demography_publications.htm

New Arab Demography Project:PUBLICATIONS
Casterline, John B., Fatma El-Zanaty, and Laila O. El-Zeini (2003). Unmet need and unintended fertility: longitudinal evidence from Upper Egypt”. International Family Planning Perspectives, 29(4): 158-166 Casterline, John B. and Steven W. Sinding. (2000) “Unmet need for family planning in developing countries and implications for population policy. “Population and development Review” 26 (4): Pp. 691-723. Feyisetan, Bamikale and John B. CASTERLINE (2000). “Fertility preferences and contraceptive change in developing countries.” International Family Planning Perspectives” 26 (3): Pp:10-109. ­­­El Saadani, Somaya (2003) “Infertility Problem in Egypt: A Hidden Suffering”, The Egyptian Population and Family Planning Review. Vol. 37 (2), pp: 20-48. (2000) “High fertility does not cause spontaneous intrauterine fetal loss: The determinants of spontaneous fetal loos in Egypt”. Social Biology. Vol. 47,fall-winter 2000, Pp.:217-243. El-Tawila, Sahar and Barbara Ibrahim (2001) “Social Change and Parent-Adolescent Dynamics in Egypt” Nicholas S. Hopkins (ed) in The New Arab Family, Cairo Paper in Social Science, Cairo: American University Press. Vols.24, Nos. 1/2. pp:214-246.

49. Health & Medical News - Caffeine May Affect Fertility - 26/07/2002
ABC Online Index science News. Men and women undergoing infertility treatmentshould re-think their coffee habit, recent evidence suggests.
http://www.abc.net.au/science/news/health/HealthRepublish_631804.htm
ABC Home Radio Television News ... Podcasts Print Email to a friend
Caffeine may affect fertility
Friday, 26 July 2002
Men and women undergoing infertility treatment should re-think their coffee habit, recent evidence suggests.
Between 1993 and 1998, Dr Hillary Klonoff-Cohen and her team at the Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of California, San Diego, observed 221 couples receiving two types of infertility treatment, in vitro fertilisation (IVF) and gamete intra-fallopian transfer (GIFT). Their results appear in the latest issue of Human Reproduction
IVF involves fertilising an egg in the laboratory by placing thousands of sperm around it. In GIFT, laparoscopy is used to inject the egg, along with processed sperm, into the fallopian tube.
The researchers measured the effect of caffeine consumption on egg cell retrieval, sperm numbers, shape and movement, fertilisation outcome, and the number of pregnancies, miscarriages and live births.
Participants were required to fill in very detailed questionnaires about how much caffeine in coffee, tea, softdrinks and chocolate they had consumed in their life, including right up to and during their treatment.
The researchers found that women who had consumed 2 to 50 mg of caffeine a day during their lifetime were three times more likely to not have a live birth than women who had consumed less than 2 mg.

50. News In Science - Caffeine May Affect Fertility - 26/07/2002
Men and women undergoing infertility treatment should rethink their coffee habitrecent 10 years of ABC science Online The future of the reef
http://www.abc.net.au/science/news/stories/s631804.htm
ABC Home Radio Television News ... Podcasts Print Email to a friend
Caffeine may affect fertility
Friday, 26 July 2002
Men and women undergoing infertility treatment should re-think their coffee habit, recent evidence suggests.
Between 1993 and 1998, Dr Hillary Klonoff-Cohen and her team at the Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of California, San Diego, observed 221 couples receiving two types of infertility treatment, in vitro fertilisation (IVF) and gamete intra-fallopian transfer (GIFT). Their results appear in the latest issue of Human Reproduction
IVF involves fertilising an egg in the laboratory by placing thousands of sperm around it. In GIFT, laparoscopy is used to inject the egg, along with processed sperm, into the fallopian tube.
The researchers measured the effect of caffeine consumption on egg cell retrieval, sperm numbers, shape and movement, fertilisation outcome, and the number of pregnancies, miscarriages and live births.
Participants were required to fill in very detailed questionnaires about how much caffeine in coffee, tea, softdrinks and chocolate they had consumed in their life, including right up to and during their treatment.
The researchers found that women who had consumed 2 to 50 mg of caffeine a day during their lifetime were three times more likely to not have a live birth than women who had consumed less than 2 mg.

51. Contacting The Bridge Centre - Fertility Clinic In London England
Useful info on how to cope and dealing with family and friends. This sitelinks to many sources of IVF, infertility and Embryology news and information.
http://www.thebridgecentre.co.uk/contact3.htm
View Site Map Links Listed below is a selection of sources of infertility related information available on the web. If you have any suggestions which you feel could be appropriate for this links page please email us on Bridge - link submissions
By linking to other sites we are attempting to provide a service to people interested in other aspects of infertility and related subjects. Egg Recipients If you believe you need donor eggs please click here -
www.bridge-eggrecipient.com
Egg Donors - If you are considering becoming an egg donor please click here -
www.bridge-eggdonor.com
Egg Sharers - If you need IVF treatment, have difficulty meeting the cost but are under 34 and produce your own eggs, please click here -
www.bridge-eggsharer.com
PGD / PGS - Professor Alan Handyside, the pioneer of PGD/PGS is scientific Director at Bridge. Click here to learn more about this powerful diagnostic methodology.
www.pgd-pgs.com

52. Pregnancy & Parenting: For Today's Mom - IVillage
program at the University of Minnesota, where she is also a doctoral studentin family social science. She and her family live in St. Paul, Minnesota.
http://parenting.ivillage.com/author/bio/0,,4rwf_70x1,00.html
var iv_cimsUid = ""; var iv_cimsCid = "12"; // Tacoda category stamp var dartCatStamp = "parenting"; Tacoda_AMS_DDC_addPair("dartCatStamp", dartCatStamp); @import "/shared/css/global/0,15920,,00.css"; @import "/shared/css/touts/0,15959,,00.css"; @import "/shared/css/layout/0,15957,layout_archive,00.css"; @import "/shared/css/content/0,15954,expert_archive,00.css"; @import "/shared/css/channel/0,15955,12,00.css"; Skip to Main Content
iVillage
iVillage web
Experts

53. POWERWEB: The Family
Ask NOAH About Pregnancy Fertility infertility NOAH (New York Online Access It hopes to lower the rate of family breakdown through coupleempowering
http://www.dushkin.com/catalog/0072479825.mhtml?SECTION=RELATED&links=0072479825

54. ScienCentral: Fathers And Infertility
International Council on infertility Information Dissemination Medical sciencehas made Ron Davenport s family grow in ways he never thought possible.
http://www.sciencentral.com/articles/view.php3?article_id=218391974

55. CM Fertility Care System
The System allows for the first time the opportunity to network family planning This new science, which refers to the use of the natural procreative
http://www.creightonmodel.com/
CREIGHTON MODEL Fertility Care System For information on a Creighton Model Teacher or Physician in my area The CREIGHTON MODEL Fertility Care System is a new, uniquely American model of advanced procreative education. It is the advanced educational technology people have been waiting for ! The System allows for the first time the opportunity to network family planning with reproductive and gynecologic health maintenance And , it provides this in harmony with nature TABLE 1
CREIGHTON MODEL
Fertility Care System Allied Health Education Model Standardized Educational Content Objective and Measurable Standards Picture Dictionary Follow-up Form Vaginal Discharge Recording System (VDRS) Standardized Terminology Standardized Observations Standardized Charting Pregnancy Evaluation Form Ongoing Assessment and Validation Process Teaching Tools Medical Model The Fertility Care System has been extensively evaluated over the past 22 years through research first at St. Louis University and Creighton University Schools of Medicine and most recently at the Pope Paul VI Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction (Omaha, Nebraska).

56. Zarutskie Fertility & Endocrine Institute
Specialists in infertility Treatment Reproductive Technology, The ZaruskieFertility He graduated from Korea University with a Masters in science.
http://www.zinstitute.org/staff.html
Home Contact Us Add Me To
Your List
... Search
Meet Our Staff
Hyunkyoo Kim (Hank) M.Sc., T.S.(ABB)
Embryologist
Hyunkyoo Kim (Hank) is married with a 3 year old son. He graduated from Korea University with a Masters in Science. Before joining The Zarutskie Fertility and Endocrine Institute Hank worked at the Infertility Medical Center in Seoul Korea and Columbia University in New York collectively for the past 8 years.
You can e-mail Hank at: Hank@zinstitute.org
Chris Gao
Embryologist
Chris specializes in assisting with egg recovery, IVF, embryo culture, embryo freezing and the transfer of embryos. He has worked in reproductive centers for four years, and for five years on mammalian embryo research. He holds a master of science degree in reproductive physiology from Lousiana State University, as well as a bachelor of science degree in veterinary medicine from Beijing Agricultural University. Chris says, "I am happy when I see our patients' eggs fertilized and become healthy embryos." In his down time, Chris enoys computer programming and studying Chinese Traditional Medicine.
Briane Bakosh, RN

57. Stress And Infertility | Family Resource (FamilyResource.com)
The idea that stress doesn t have a relationship with infertility has also For example, when wellmeaning friends and family give unsolicited advice to
http://www.familyresource.com/pregnancy/33/1054/
Find Articles
  • Relationships Parenting Pregnancy ... Stress and Infertility
    Stress and Infertility
    By: Jon Henshaw, M.A. For many years, scientists and infertility specialist have shrugged off the idea that stress affects infertility. Even early research suggested that stress didn't seem to have any correlation. The idea that stress doesn't have a relationship with infertility has also offered reassurance for many women experiencing infertility. For example, when well-meaning friends and family give unsolicited advice to just relax, and you'll get pregnant , she can usually rest in the fact that stress isn't really a factor. The separation of stress and infertility also fits well into American culture. Today, more than ever, women are expected to excel in business, and to handle just as much stress and responsibility as men do. So the idea that stress might affect infertility would not be well received by most successful women. Especially since it doesn't fit into the goals and aspirations that they've made for themselves. As with all progress in science and research, new insights and discoveries are being made everyday. Fortunately, stress has continued to play a major role in infertility research. Scientists and specialists have continued to research stress and infertility, mainly because they started to find a correlation between stress and the success of Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ART). They also pursued it, because mental health workers started to document the intense stress many infertile couples were experiencing.

58. Tikun Olam-תקון עולם: Make The World A Better Place » C
Only in the eyes of someone who profoundly mistrusts science and the benefits it What’s interesting about all this is that the Silverstein family
http://www.richardsilverstein.com/tikun_olam/category/children-family/
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Tikun Olam-תקון עולם: Make the World a Better Place
Seattle Science-Technology-Weblogs I was listening to North African music ( probably rai music from Algeria) on KBCS children relativity einstein ...
My Beautiful Girl: Miriam
My beautiful girl, Miriam They were nine months old a week ago.
Permalink
Comments
Adin in his stroller and sun hat The Dog Who Hates Cursing babies dog children Permalink ... Calling All Angels hear it In a s©ance-like rite, they begin singing Calling All Angels. Click here I first heard this song on KCRW When I Was a Boy (an amazing album) and played the hell out of it on air. post about the album for my mp3 blog and you can listen to two other songs from the album there. Today, I had a terribly dispiriting altercation with my next door neighbor and this song was all that prevented me from determining that human beings are basically shits. Thank God for music when all else around you seems to turn to shit.
hbo
fisher siberry angels ... Film-TV The fallout from Barbara Walters on air rebuke of breastfeeding mothers continues (see my post comments on women who breastfeed in public ("It’s natural. Well, so is urinating, but most folks don’t up and pee in a glass jar in the middle of the mall.") mark him as one of the world’s biggest bloviators–or at the very least the Pacific NW’s biggest. His commentary is so rich in ignorance, rank prejudice and blatant misogyny that I just had to quote the entire thing:

59. Tikun Olam-תקון עולם: Make The World A Better Place » E
Middle East peace, world music, children, family and the outdoors. from infertility, I couldn’t agree more with your views on Elizabeth Edwards.
http://www.richardsilverstein.com/tikun_olam/2004/07/elizabeth-edwar/
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Tikun Olam-תקון עולם: Make the World a Better Place
Science-Technology-Weblogs I was intrigued to read in the New York Times that Elizabeth Edwards
(from A Modern Breed of Political Wife , which also appeared in the July 9th edition of International Herald Tribune from which it was published by the Georgetown Times and zwire.com). Katharine Seelye in the July 23rd edition of the Times ( Unpretentious Political Wife Strikes Empathetic Chords ) goes a little farther in writing:
She took hormone shots and gave birth when she was 48 to a daughter, Emma Claire, now 6, and to a son, Jack, now 4, when she was 50. Insurance Coverage of Infertility Treatments letter to Ms. Edwards UPDATE : As of October 24, 2004, Ms. Edwards has not responded to my letter. Permalink TrackBack
4 Comments
  • said,
    July 24, 2004 @ 12:43 am
    Brooklyn Girl said,
    July 28, 2004 @ 6:03 pm
    Meg said,
    August 12, 2004 @ 5:12 am Congrats on your little girl and impending arrival of twins.
  • 60. Art & Science Of The Voluntary Surrender - Seminar Training CDs & Tapes/Permanen
    p Maris Blechner and Kathe Stojowski, family Focus Adoption Services, New York . Reviews for Art science of the Voluntary Surrender
    http://adoptionshop.com/p873/seminar-training-cds-tapes-permanency-options/art-s
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    This session presents a new look at the how and why of the critically important (and significantly underused) birth parent voluntary surrender. The presenters represent an adoption agency that has taken hundreds of respectful, meaningful, appropriate birth parent surrenders, so that babies and older children could be adopted without time consuming, traumatic, and costly court terminations. Bring your own stories and questions with you. Maris Blechner and Kathe Stojowski, Family Focus Adoption Services, New York
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