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Doctor Malpani has also written a book called
"How to Get the Best Medical Care - For Less".
click here.
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Chapter 1 Do you have an infertility problem ? When to Start Worrying! Chapter 2 How Babies are Made - The Basics Chapter 3 Finding Out What’s Wrong -- The Basic Medical Tests Chapter 4 Testing the Man - Semen Analysis. Chapter 5 Beyond the Semen Analysis Chapter 6 Diagnosis and Treatment for Male Infertility -- More Confusion ! Chapter 7 The Case of the Man with a Low Sperm Count. Chapter 8 Microinjection: The Latest Advance in Treating the Infertile Man. Chapter 9 Ultrasound - Seeing with Sound. Chapter 10 Laparoscopy -- The Kinder Cut Chapter 11 Hysteroscopy Chapter 12 The Tubal Connection Chapter 13 Ovulation -- Normal and Abnormal Chapter 14 The Older Woman Chapter 15 Polycystic Ovarian Disease (PCOD) Chapter 16 The Cervical Factor Chapter 17 Hirsutism -- Excess Facial and Body Hair Chapter 18 Endometriosis -- The Silent Invader Chapter 19 Ectopic Pregnancy – The Time Bomb in the Tube Chapter 20 Unexplained Infertility Chapter 21 Secondary Infertility -- Caught Between Fertile And Infertile Worlds Chapter 22 Empty Arms -- The Lonely Trauma of Miscarriage Chapter 23 Understanding Your Medicines Chapter 24 Intrauterine Insemination Chapter 25 Test Tube Babies - IVF & GIFT Chapter 26 PREIMPLANTATION GENETIC DIAGNOSIS - the newest ART Chapter 27 Using Donor Sperm Chapter 28 Surrogate Mothering Chapter 29 When Enough is Enough - The Decision to End Treatment Chapter 30 Adoption - Yours by Choice Chapter 31 Childfree living - Life without children Chapter 32 Stress And Infertility Chapter 33 The Emotional Crisis of Infertility Chapter 34 How to Cope with Infertility Chapter 35 Infertility and Sexuality Chapter 36 Support Groups-Self-Help is the Best Help Chapter 37 Myths and Misconceptions Chapter 38 Helping Hands - How Friends and Relatives can Help Chapter 39 RIGHTS OF THE INFERTILE COUPLE - AND WHAT SOCIETY NEEDS TO DO ABOUT THEM Chapter 40 Alternative Medicine: Exploring Your Treatment Options Chapter 41 Making Decisions about Treatment Chapter 42 How to Find the Best Doctor Chapter 43 How to Make the Most of Your Doctor Chapter 44 Let the reader beware - making sense of medical stories in the news Chapter 45 THE INFERTILE PATIENT'S GUIDE TO THE INTERNET Chapter 46 The Ethical Issues - Right or Wrong ? Chapter 47 How Much Does Treatment Cost? Chapter 48 Pregnant - At Last ! Chapter 49 Preventing Infertility Chapter 50 The Infertile Patient's Prayer and Infertility "Defined" Chapter 51 Making IVF affordable Chapter 52 Why are women scared of IVF ? Chapter 53 INFERTILITY RECORD SHEET Chapter 54 Self-Insemination |
The word surrogate means substitute or replacement - and a surrogate mother is one who lends her uterus to another couple so that they can have a baby. In the West where fewer and fewer babies are offered for adoption, surrogacy is gaining popularity, despite controversial legal and ethical hassles. Which women need surrogates ? The commonest reason is a woman who has no uterus. This may be absent from birth ( Mullerian agenesis); or may have been removed surgically ( hysterectomy for life-saving reasons, such as excessive bleeding during a caesarean). Other women who may wish to explore surrogacy include those who have had multiple miscarriages; or who have failed repeated IVF attempts for unexplained reasons. Women who agree to become surrogates may do so for compassionate reasons. These include a sister, mother or close friend of the couple . They may also do so for financial remuneration - and this could be a woman, with or without children, known or unknown to the couple , who rents her womb for a fee. There are two main kinds of surrogacy:- 1. The surrogate mother provides the egg. In this case , the surrogate is inseminated artificially by the husband's sperm . In this case, the infertile woman has no genetic relationship to the baby. 2. More commonly, the infertile woman provides the egg, which is then either transferred to the surrogate mother by GIFT along with her husband's sperm ; or fertilised in vitro by IVF with her husband's sperm and an embryo transfer performed to the surrogate's uterus, which then acts as an incubator for the next nine months. Certain guidelines have been laid down to try to minimise misuse of the surrogacy technique; and a surrogate motherhood contract needs to be drawn up, which should specify that the child will become the legitimate adopted child of the infertile couple , the intended parents. This needs to be signed by the couple, the surrogate, and her husband. The legal waters of surrogate motherhood will continue to be murky, and there are no laws or guidelines in India as yet. This is why the element of trust between the couple and the surrogate mother is so important. It is vital that the surrogate and the couple consider the future of the child. The receiving mother should ideally be present at the birth and care for the baby in hospital. She can even be prepared for breast feeding ( induced lactation ) by hormone treatment. Surrogacy has spawned a host of legal and emotional issues to which there are no "right" answers. Like * What will you do if the surrogate insists on keeping the child ? *How much should you pay the surrogate ? * If she gets ill as a result of the pregnancy who will pay the medical costs ? * Is it possible to put the receiving mother's name as mother on the birth certificate ? * Will you tell the child about the surrogacy ? * Will surrogates undertake pregnancy for profit ? * What happens if the child is handicapped and is unwanted by the couple and the surrogate mother ? * What happens if the surrogate dies during child birth ? Many people are worried about the possibility of the surrogacy technique being misused. They feel it may allow the exploitation of poor women who may be used as "mother machines" to bear babies - much like the wet nurses of yesteryear. Surrogacy has received quite a lot of bad press recently - especially when the contract goes sour and there is a dispute over the baby between the commissioning parents and the surrogate mother - this make headline news. The Courts then need to have the wisdom of Solomon to assign the rights of the "genetic" mother; the "birth" mother; and the "social or rearing" mother. Nevertheless, we must remember that surrogacy does offer one method of achieving parenthood to a few couples who could never have a baby by any other means. The road to surrogacy is a rocky one and requires much thought. It is perhaps the most complex and difficult way to achieve parenthood.
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