Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Aimee Eyvazzadeh"


2 mentions found


Women who choose to undergo reproductive technology procedures such as egg freezing face a long road riddled with obstacles. Here's a look into the driving forces behind egg freezing and the financial, social and emotional costs that come with it — based on personal experiences from women across the country. She wanted to remove some of the stigma around egg freezing and give her followers an inside look at the arduous process. The benefits are high, but so are the costsWhile the benefits of egg freezing are certainly enormous, so too are the associated costs. Many women need multiple egg freezing cycles, especially as they grow older and egg number and quality begin to deteriorate.
Persons: Lynn Curry, cryopreservation dewar, Roselle Chen, That's, Marcia Inhorn, Inhorn, Nicole Noyes, Aimee Eyvazzadeh, Noyes, Eyvazzadeh, Serena Kerrigan, Kerrigan, Jenny Hayes Edwards, Hayes Edwards Organizations: Huntsville Reproductive, Reuters, Life Sciences, Women, Yale University, CNBC, Nutrition Locations: Huntsville, Madison , Alabama, U.S, Alabama, United States, America, New York, California, Colorado
CNN —It has been well-known in research that Black babies are about twice as likely to die as White babies before their first birthday. But when conceived by assisted reproductive technology, neonatal mortality was more than four-fold higher among babies of Black women. Assisted reproductive technology, which is used to treat infertility, includes infertility treatments that involve eggs and sperm. Those rates were four-fold higher in infants of Black versus White mothers who used assisted reproductive technology, such as IVF. Black women are about three times more likely to die from pregnancy-related causes than White women, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Total: 2