Should I freeze my eggs? Fertility expert and egg-freezing advocate weigh in

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 1 ส.ค. 2024
  • Over the last few years, egg freezing has been growing in popularity; during 2020, egg-freezing procedures in the US were estimated to have increased by nearly 40% compared to pre-pandemic numbers. So, ABC Localish is on a mission to help viewers answer the question of "Should I freeze my eggs?" with insight from Dr. James Grifo, Program Director of the NYU Langone Fertility Center, and Serena Kerrigan, an influencer who recently froze her eggs and advocates passionately online for more education on the topic.
    Delia Paunescu is a 36-year-old social media consultant currently considering freezing her eggs. On this episode of "Should I?" Paunescu sits down with Dr. Grifo and Kerrigan to learn more about the procedure including information about its cost, invasiveness, and success rate. Watch the full episode to find out what Paunescu’s final decision was!
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ความคิดเห็น • 5

  • @leedlbagginshield8492
    @leedlbagginshield8492 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    That's the best and most honest video on egg freezing I've seen so far on TH-cam. Great work, Doctor

  • @user-ux2sg2ek1y
    @user-ux2sg2ek1y 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Can I just add the importance of the male perspective: having been in a relationship with someone who, for reasons I never understood, didn't freeze her eggs, it's incredibly distressing - for men and women- when you hit 40/41 and you either can't conceive or can't hold a pregnancy - and you realize egg freezing would have given you extra opportunities for a baby. 1) Doing it at 36 before sharper decline in fertility is a very good idea BUT for many women with reasonable fertility even retrievals at 38,9 are very worthwhile. The best clinics have excellent implantation techniques, and give maximum advice on diets for women doing ivf. Remember egg freezing is basically ivf odds at the time you freeze eggs, so: 36 year old eggs have a 40/5 per cent live birth per embryo transfer ; but a 38/9 year old has still around a 30 per cent chance. The best is to bank embryos so my 36 year old girlfriend is doing 2 retrievals and we are creating 5 embryos so if needed we can do ivf. It's not only a great back up plan but can be used for a second or third baby if, as many 37 year old couples will do, you end up with 'only' one child. My 45 year old cousin has a second baby on the way from double egg freeze at 39. I know a 46 year old who had a solo baby with her 36 year old double retrieval - she created 3 embryo's with the donor at 39 which was wise because in case the thaw had failed she could have done double retrieve at 39. She still had 12 eggs spare in case she has met someone else. This sort of foresight is vital. Unfortunately many people don't understand fertility timeline: descent grows 35-39 but it's fairly slow meaning you still have that time to take action. I hear women say 'i didn't freeze at 35/6 so it's too late ' but it's not true as long as you are fairly fertile and don't have underlying complications. Also some people seem to think own egg pregnancies ( natural or ivf) are very possible at 43/4 which is nonsense. Only people who have had multiple births have even a sporting chance of holding a pregnancy in mid forties. Plus people think own egg ivf works at 42,3,4 because celebs pop out babies - it doesn't work and it's either donor eggs ( a miracle in itself) or frozen eggs. The irony is some of the same people who don't freeze eggs in thirties still believe ivf works in your forties: so underlying lesson: please freeze eggs in your 30s, potentially up to 3 times; and bank some embryos if you can by 38/9.

    • @ogonwaneri5553
      @ogonwaneri5553 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      This comment is very helpful. Thank you

  • @yangyijane
    @yangyijane 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    may i know what is the paper the Dr mentioned in the video on the successful rates of having a birth child with thawing eggs