Infertility: When to Seek Medical Help?

Infertility: When to Seek Medical Help?

Your doctor says you are INFERTILE. Don't you feel a plethora of emotions that make you feel stressed out? Will I be able to conceive ever? How will my family take this pain? Will there be a proper diagnosis available? There is an irksome pressure that holds the women emotions and decisions when they learn about their fertility.

Without any doubt, Infertility is rising! Over six couples today struggle with infertility (the biological inability to conceive or carry a pregnancy to full term). The doctor says factors mentioned below contribute to this staggering and continuously growing statistic.

  • Delayed Childbearing
  • Advanced Maternal Age
  • Medical Conditions
  • Sexually transmitted diseases
  • Obesity and Environmental Factors
infertility

Most importantly, as women continue to work and delay in having children, their needs with regard to infertility treatment have risen considerably.

When to seek medical help?

What can you expect in the treatment?

The fertility tests can take some time so it is best to make an appointment early. The specialist will be able to carry out an initial assessment to check what may be causing fertility problems and advice you for the next step.

The doctor says, when it comes to fertility tests, males are a little shy and apprehensive about the whole process. But as an expert, it is always best for both the partners to visit as infertility can be a problem in a man or woman, or sometimes both. Trying to conceive is an emotional process so it is important to support each other as much as possible.

Are there any infertility treatments available?

Fertility treatments for women are: