T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
253.3 | Infertility | CSC32::JOHNS | | Fri Mar 27 1987 14:30 | 7 |
| Well, I'm not incensed, but I'm getting there. Please let's stick
to the topic at hand, and not let this tangent before it even gets
started. I am having troubles with infertility, too, and would
very much like to see some responses to the base note from men and
women who have been there.
Carol
|
253.4 | try and imagine how your words sound to others | STUBBI::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Fri Mar 27 1987 22:18 | 14 |
| to .1 movaghar
Not having had a serious fertility problem and having adopted
kids maybe I can say something to your note....
You obviously meant well - but your note would be a very
painful one to an infertile woman.
The only thing I can compare it to would be like telling
a young woman whose husband had just died that she was
young and pretty and would marry again soon,
or, to tell the parent of an adopted child that had died
that it was not the same as if it had been their own child.
|
253.5 | answering impertinent questions | HOMBRE::HOWER | | Sat Mar 28 1987 12:08 | 27 |
| back to .0:
>I don't want to be reminded of it constantly and
>have to act civil to these people. This is a *very* private matter
>and I am not about to tell them *why* I'm not pregnant. So I have to
>smile, while I feel frustrated and I sometimes want to cry.
It's none of their business!!
You could actually cry or explain, which should sufficiently embarrass
these clods to cause them to shut up, but I can understand that you
don't want to discuss it.
Do you read Miss Manners? She's very good at suggesting perfectly
civil, reasonable, and uninformative answers (aka put-downs) to
impertinent questions.
Another option might be to turn the question back on the person.
If they're so wild about kids, when are they going to have THEIR next
one?
or just smile and say "well, not for the next nine months" and
change the subject.
Good luck. I was somewhat luckier, but recall and sympathize
with your frustrations.
Helen
|
253.6 | thanks for the insight | HARDY::HENDRICKS | | Sun Mar 29 1987 18:41 | 10 |
| .0
I'm glad you said what you said. Occasionally I have run into
ex-co-workers whose main topic of conversation (while we were
co-workers) was Trying To Get Pregnant. Because it was discussed
so openly, when running into some of those people after a job change,
I asked how it was going. I got the feeling I had committed a major
faux pas, and now I understand better why that is so. I'll think
twice next time, and have some measure of understanding.
|
253.8 | misunderstandings | STUBBI::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Mon Mar 30 1987 14:06 | 7 |
| re .7
It looks like another case of awkward pharasing here - I think people
reacted to your first note on the assumption that you had not had
infertility problems (I know I did). This is a subject where the
emotions lie very close to the surface and it is easy to misunderstand
what another person is or is not saying.
Bonnie
|
253.9 | | CSC32::JOHNS | | Mon Mar 30 1987 17:34 | 5 |
| re: .7
thank you for clarifying.
Carol
|
253.10 | There ARE more points of view than one, ya know... | SOFTY::HEFFELFINGER | The valient Spaceman Spiff! | Tue Mar 31 1987 11:35 | 38 |
| Well, I suppose I'd better put on my asbestos suit because I'm
sure I'll get flamed for this.
I don't think whether .1 has/had an infertility problem has
anything to with whether or not she should have been flamed for
her well-intentioned note. Perhaps it wasn't the right thing to
say, but how to you teach someone to be considerate/understand the
"other side", by being intolerant and flaming judgementally at her?
You have to realize that there are indeed all different types
in this world. Perhaps I was wrong, but I thought that one of the
purposes of this notefile was "valuing differences".
Well, one of those differences is rearing it's ugly (?) head
now. I happen to believe that if/when I ever decide to have a child,
it won't make any difference to me as to whether it is a child of
my body or an adopted child. This does not mean that I do not
sympathize with .0. It is indeed a very difficult thing to come
to terms with the fact that something you very dearly want to happen
looks like it may not. What it does mean is that from my point
of view, .1 had a valid suggestion, phrased rather delicately as
a matter of fact, in my opinion.
re:.0 While I am not in your situation, I am in a related one.
My husband and I do not wish to have children. Gary's more vehement
about than I am, and yet the main pressure to have children is on
me. While the questions about "when are you going to have a kid",
don't bring me the pain they do you, they are uncomfortable to put
it mildly. It is especially difficult when you realize that my
husband is an only child and his mother dearly wishes to have
grandchildren. I get extremely tired of being pressured and having
people make me try feel "less than a woman" for not wanting children.
I wish I had an answer for you. ( I wish I had an answer for
me ;-))
tlh
|
253.11 | Whatsa matter, your wife can't have kids? | GENRAL::FRASHER | An opinion for any occasion | Tue Mar 31 1987 14:39 | 14 |
| As with TLH, .10, we decided not to have children. We got the same
questions. The thing that seems ridiculous to me is that it is
always assumed that its the *woman* who is infertile. I guess if
the man were infertile, he would be less of a man in the eyes of
many. (Hogwash, I know) We were both fertile, but just try to
tell someone that. We've been called selfish, stupid, self-centered,
and accused of depriving a life. Lots of people would try to convince
us that we would be happy with our own child and the conversations
almost always ended up with us finding that they weren't happy with
their own children.
Just tell them that you're thinking about it.
spence
|
253.12 | i get hassled too | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Tue Mar 31 1987 15:06 | 14 |
| I've been hassled, too, about having kids. the ribbing and the
questions started several years before i even met my husband,
intensified at the wedding, and haven't really let up yet. everyone
wants me to have children for THEIR pleasure; few of these people
have bothered to figure out how WE feel about it. and right now,
i'm not interested. my in-laws ASSUME we're going to have kids
(and they've asked us to hurry up so that they can enjoy the tots
while they (the in-laws) are still healthy). the in-laws are also
planning to take things away from other family members so that the
grandchildren can get them. I imagine that the pain of having to
deal with these intrusions would be greatly increased if I DID want
kids but was unable to have them.
liz
|
253.13 | | WATNEY::SPARROW | You want me to do what?? | Tue Mar 31 1987 15:26 | 11 |
| My daughter has an answer for people who ask "her" (while I am
standing there) "when's your mommy going to give you a little brother
or sister??
She opens her eyes real wide, innocence personified and says...
She's spaded.
So thanks to her, when people ask me if I am going to have anymore
children, I give her PJs answer.
vivian
|
253.14 | It's no one's business but yours | VENTUR::GIUNTA | | Wed Apr 01 1987 10:35 | 34 |
| I've been mostly fortunate in that my family has not ever even asked
if we plan to have children. My folks had an incredibly difficult
time having children since my father had a low sperm count, and
my mother had some kind of problem. My Mom told me they will never
ask us about our plans for kids because it hurt so much when they
were trying and failing and people kept on asking. It took them
2 years before my mother conceived my brother, and it was another
15 years before they got me.
Now, my in-laws are an entirely different story. My mother-in-law
stayed in our apartment while we were on our honeymoon. When we
returned, we found all sorts of Planned Parenthood pamphlets on
having children and how to be good parents. I immediately called
her and told her that those hints were not appreciated, and that
we would let her know about children when the time came. She has
not asked since.
My husband's aunts and grandmother have been pushing for us to have
children lately, so I told them in no uncertain terms that it was
none of their business. They also have not asked again. I have
found that if you answer such questions firmly and in a very cold
manner that it is no one's business but your own, people will get
the message.
Also, on a more positive note, I have a cousin who is in his
mid-forties. He and his wife had tried for years to have children,
and had tried just about everything imaginable. I think they had
pretty much given up, but after 18 years of marriage, they finally
had a beautiful baby girl, so anything is possible, and don't give
up hope!
Good luck.
Cathy
|
253.15 | my relatives don't ask | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Wed Apr 01 1987 17:19 | 16 |
| I don't have children either and people ask me when too. Sometimes,
though it's not a direct question. It's more a matter of discussing
someone's birthing (there seems to be a lot of people having children
lately), and when they mention problems (like 3 days in labor,
c-sections, etc) they look at me and say: "but it's worth it". I
usually give them a sceptical look and don't comment. I'd like
a good comeback too, but somehow saying it's none of their business
doesn't seem appropriate in that situation. I actually find
relatives much more discrete than acquaintances.
I don't know much about the problems of infertility, but I think
(from the number of women who've mentioned it to me) that it must
be much more common than people believe. Maybe that's why so many
are insensitive when they ask about having children.
..Karen
|
253.16 | Snappy answers... | MIRFAK::TILLSON | | Thu Apr 02 1987 13:13 | 14 |
| I have a Fundamentalist Christian aunt who (prior to my marriage)
asked at a family gathering, "When are you going to get married
and give your grandparents some greatgrandchildren?"
Well, I looked her in the eye, put on my most serious expression
and tone of voice, and said, "Well, I really don't want children,
but my sweetie and I practice quite alot, just in case."
You know, she never asked me that again.
A little shock goes a long way.
Rita
|
253.17 | slight digression... | HARDY::HENDRICKS | | Thu Apr 02 1987 18:12 | 15 |
| not on the topic of fertility, but doing this made me feel good
even though it was snotty--
(I was a teenager, and about 40 lbs. overweight when this happened.)
At my grandmother's funeral one of my older aunts walked up to me
and said, "Holly, you're so fat! You really should do something
about yourself!".
I looked her straight in the eye and said "You look like you're pushing a
size 44 yourself."
She was horrified, but that was the last *I* heard of it. It's
too bad that it takes sheer rudeness to get some people off one's
case.
|
253.18 | My Story | WIZDOM::MONTOYA | LOIS | Fri Apr 03 1987 17:18 | 41 |
| re: .0
I can really understand how you feel. When my husband and I decided
to try to have children we had a tough time of it. After a year
of trying on our own I went to a doctor. He have me the same chart
and thermometer for 6 months. But he didn't really see a problem
and wanted me to go fo another 6 months of the same telling me I
was still young and had plenty of time to think about and try having
children. I asked him what types of tests he would recommend my
having at the end of the additional 6 months and he told me. I
then told him I didn't want to wait another 6 months for the tests,
but he seemed rather firm about it. Additionnally, my husband had
already gone through testing as well, and we were pretty sure that
the problem wasn't on his end. I remember the hurt feeling I had
thinking about what I considered another wasted 6 months of time
and his STUPID remark on my being young enough not to have to worry
about it so much. So, what did I do...I told him that I DID NOT
want to wait the 6 months and I wanted the tests done NOW. If he
wouldn't do them, then I would find another specialist who would.
I also told him what I thought about his remark regarding my age,
then 23. Well, he agreed to do the tests and low and behold, the
problem was discovered. It seemed that I was producing a type of
acid that would, as soon as an egg was released, kill it. Prescribed
treatment was take birth control pills for 6 months, stay off them
for additional 3 months to get them out of my system again, and
then try. The results...A baby girl born 9 months after treatment.
And, my second child born last may.
I think what hurt most is people's casual attitude about having
children...like it wasn't such a difficult thing to do. I remember
people asking me when we were going to have children during the
first year we were trying on our own. All I said was.."You'll be
the third to know.
Just never give up for what you know you want so badly, and keep
those doctors on their toes. What may seem like plenty of time
for your to have children to them, it NOT how it seems to you.
Best hopes and strength to you....
Lois
|
253.19 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | UI:Where the rubber meets the road | Tue Apr 07 1987 13:10 | 14 |
| .18 reminded me of something...
A very close friend of mine was trying to have kids. I would have
asked her about it relatively often, because I knew it was something
she cared about very much. *However*, she also made it clear to
me that it was a painful subject, so, I always let her (or her hubby)
bring it up.
So, if someone tells me that they're trying, and that they'll tell
me when the pregnancy occurs, I'm not always sharp enough to realize
they don't want to be asked about it. I have to be told.
Hers is a happy ending (after two miscarriages).
Mez
|
253.20 | Good News! | CSC32::JOHNS | My chocolate, all mine! | Tue Jul 07 1987 15:36 | 7 |
| Well, this seems like a good time to share my news. The doctor
found a cyst which was preventing me from becoming pregnant.
It worked. I am now pregnant and the baby is due around late February.
I have two friends who are still going through tests to find out
if their infertility can be helped. I pray that they will be as
lucky as I am.
Carol (Hooray!!!)
|
253.21 | when I was kid..... | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Mudluscious and puddle-wonderfull | Tue Jul 07 1987 21:04 | 5 |
| Congradulations Carol. Just think, the way things change so fast
nowdays you can tell your kid stores about the old days when you
had to use keyboards instead of just telling the computer what to
do. :*) liesl
|
253.22 | | COLORS::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Wed Sep 23 1987 13:51 | 40 |
|
The following response is from the author of the basenote.
=maggie
=========================================================================
RE: adoption
I was talking to my specialist a while back about what problems
could be found during a laparoscopy. Without getting into much
detail; he mentioned that some things he could fix using a lazer at
the same time as the laparoscopy, and that others would require
coming in for more complicated surgery. And then there were things
that could not be fixed. He said that if he saw something that
required further surgery, that we would discuss it then and we would
have to decide whether we wanted to go through with it. He then
made a comment about how he wasn't very sympathetic to couples who
have "fixable problems" but decide to try for adoption. He didn't
like to write recomendations for them. He said he knows of so many
people who just can't have children and that there are few enough
adoptable children to go around.
I don't want to go into a tangent on how many adoptable children
there are and from where. What struck me was that it encouraged me
to go on. To find out why we weren't getting pregnant and to try to
resolve it. Maybe just as I look with envy at pregnant couples,
maybe "unfixable" infertile couples look with envy at me if we have
something that could be "fixed".
Of course, I have to add that infertility is one of those grey areas
in science. There's never any "fixable" problems. It's more like
unfixable and we don't know.
Anyways the above seems to ramble a bit. Maybe you'll know what I
mean. I'm still in the looking process, I've finished my "basic"
workup and have to work with the Doctor on what's next. Sometime
when I have the time, I'll make a list of what the basic workup is
for those who might have to go through it.
.0
|
253.23 | Details on workup?? | FRSBEE::GIUNTA | | Thu Sep 24 1987 09:12 | 38 |
| re .22
I would appreciate more info on your basic workup and the follow-up
as I have just started to go through this procedure. My doctor
has said there are 4 things that she wants to do to determine if
there is a problem, then I guess we will discuss the alternatives
if she finds something wrong. The things that are being done are:
1) Temperature chart (I've got enough done already so that she
could determine that the cycle is normal)
2) Semen Analysis. (My husband came through with flying colors
and lots of complaining, so we know that if there is a problem,
it's not with him.)
3) Blood work to check my hormone levels. (That was done at
the time of the consultation)
4) Post coital exam. (This is the last part of the workup, and
will be done shortly.)
I hope to have some answers on what's going on after the postcoital
is done. I would be very interested in knowing more about what
kinds of problems can be found, and what my alternatives may be,
if you have that kind of information. Fortunately, I have received
no pushback from my regular doctor or the fertility specialist.
When I told my regular doctor that we've been trying for 9 months
with no success, she immediately gave me the referral to the fertility
specialist, and I was able to see the fertility specialist 2 days
later. She (I like having female doctors) ordered the workup right
away, and I expect my results next week. This whole process has
been going on for 2 weeks, and I definitely feel like we are making
progress. I was expecting to get the same story you did about "try
for another 6 months", and I had already decided that I was not
going to accept that as an answer. It sure had helped to have read
this note for some encouragement.
Good luck to you on the rest of your testing, and if you get a chance,
please let me know what to expect. I'd appreciate it.
Thanks,
Cathy
|
253.24 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Fri Sep 25 1987 09:51 | 128 |
| The following response is from the author of the basenote.
=maggie
================================================================
Basic workup for infertility (order may vary):
1. History
2. Complete Physical Exam
3. Pelvic Exam (with pap smear and cultures)
4. Basal Temperature Chart
Each morning when you awake, you take your temperature, and mark
it on the chart. You also mark when you have intercourse and
other items. Your temperature is low after menstruation and
rises right after ovulation. This helps you time intercourse.
5. Blood and urine tests
This checks for hormones in the woman.
6. Semen Analysis
How many, how active are they?
7. Post-Coital Test
This test is performed just before the expected day of
ovulation. You and your partner have normal intercourse (without
lubricants) the day before. The doctor will take a small amount
of mucus from your cervix to be studied for the number of live
active sperm. They also check the quality of your mucus. This
is performed in the doctor's office and is similar to a pap
smear.
8. Ultrasound
Here the doctor is looking at your follicles to see if you're
ovulating properly and help determine what day you ovulate. It
is also used in conjunction with treatments to get the exact
time of ovulation. You have to go in a few days in a row, and
the doctor measures the size of the follicle. The doctor can
see when it bursts which indicates you have ovulated. For this
test you must have a *full* bladder. (I thought mine was full,
and they made me go drink a few more glasses of water). The
doctor moves the ultrasound over your bladder and ovary area, so
it's kind of uncomfortable. However, you can watch it on the
screen, so it's the most fun of the tests. (I like the
examination rooms that have bathrooms in them).
9. Endometrial Biopsy
This test determines if you are ovulating, and examines the
quality of the uterine lining in preparation for implantation of
the fertilized egg. You might want to use a barrier
contraceptive to avoid pregnancy during the cycle preceding
this. If you were to get pregnant it might abort it. This
procedure is done in the office 2 days prior to your menstrual
period, ideally on day 12 of the temperature rise. The doctor
gives you a local anesthetic in your cervix before scraping the
uterine lining. You might feel some cramping. Sometimes you
have some spotting (bleeding) after this test is done. (My
first doctor forgot to tell me, and I was afraid she might have
injured me). A small instrument is inserted into your uterus and
a portion of uterine tissue is obtained. (My regular
gynecologist didn't have a small enough instrument, so couldn't
perform the test, that's when I went to the specialist. I think
specialists are also better at it). You need to call the office
when your period starts so they know exactly how many days
before the test was done. The lab usually needs 2 weeks to get
the results.
10. Hysterosalpingogram
This test is done on an outpatient basis in the Radiology
Department and involves injecting a dye into your uterus that
shows up on x-ray. The dye outlines the inside of the uterus and
tubes. If the fallopian tubes are open, the dye passes in the
surrounding pelvic cavity and is reabsorbed by your body. This
test may or may not be associated with mild cramping. This test
is done after you have stopped menstruating but before ovulation
generally between days 6 to 10. Generally, you will be told the
result of this test when it is completed. (I didn't have this
test done. It's usually done near the beginning of the tests,
and then they ask you to try for awhile again. Since we have
been infertile for over 2 years, my doctor decided to move on to
the laparoscopy. You can find out the same information as well
as other stuff during that.)
11. Semen antibodies test
This is another semen analysis to check for antibodies. I think
that if antibodies exist, then this is a serious problem.
12. The hamster test
Another semen analysis. In this one they take the sperm and see
if it can penetrate a hamster egg, and how many of them can.
13. Laparoscopy-Hysteroscopy
This test is done in Day Surgery in the hospital. You are put
to sleep and a laparoscope (like a telescope) is placed through
a small incision in the navel. The uterus, tubes, and ovaries
are viewed directly. At the same time another laparoscope is
placed through the opening in the cervix-womb to view the inside
of the uterus. You will usually go home a few hours after
surgery and feel well enough to return to work in 3-5 days. (see
related topic for what this is like)
This is pretty much all I know about. I'll tell you about more tests
as I learn about them. Of course these will probably be directed
towards the area where we have our problem. Oh, here's a list of
organizations that might help:
American Fertility Society
1608 Thirteenth Avenue South
Birmingham, Alabama 35205
The Barren Foundation
6 East Monroe Street
Chicago, Illinois 60603
Planned Parenthood of New York City, Inc.
Family Planning and Information Service
300 Park Avenue South
New York, New York 10019
Resolve, Inc.
P.O. Box 474
Belmont, Massachusetts 02178
United Infertility Organization
P.O. Box 23
Scarsdale, New York 10583
.0
|
253.25 | Infertility | CSC32::JOHNS | Yes, I *am* pregnant :-) | Fri Sep 25 1987 13:20 | 41 |
| re: .24
You are good! What detailed explanations!
I have had many of the procedures you talk about, but most of them
were performed during my laproscopy. There are so many things that
could be wrong when a woman is infertile, and I didn't want to spend
forever trying to find out; I wanted to get it over with. My doctor
told me basically the same as yours: that it could be easily fixable
(at the same time), fixable for later surgery, non-fixable, or they
might still be stumped. Luckily for me, they found a cyst on one
of my ovaries, drained and biopsied it, and I got pregnant the next
month. If I had chosen one test each month (or so) then I would have had
to wait forever before we got to something that would have found
the cyst, and I still would have had to have the surgery. I consider
myself lucky.
It was no fun going through the heartache of trying month after
month, charting the temperature, taking the ovulation tests, and
feeling like a failure (even though I knew that it wasn't my "fault",
or anyone's "fault" that I wasn't pregnant). Every month was a
frustration. I knew other people going through it also, and I really
did feel jealousy and hurt when a friend saw us having trouble and
decided just to go off the birth control for a month and "see what
happened" and then she immediately became pregnant. I was so happy
for her, but deep down I also felt some resentment. She had been
scared to tell me, because she was afraid of a reaction like that.
I tried to show only happiness for her.
For those people who are going through this, I can only offer my
understanding and my experiences. There is no guarantee that I
will not have troubles in any future attempts to become pregnant,
but at least I don't feel so hopeless now. The worst "help" I got
while trying to become pregnant was from an infertile friend who
told us not to get too excited or rush out to buy baby things yet,
since we might not be able to get pregnant. She was almost gloating
when we were having troubles. The important thing to remember is
that most infertility troubles are fixable, and to hang in there.
It may take a year, or even much longer, but the chances are that
you WILL be able to have a baby.
Carol
|
253.26 | Resentful but not hateful | SSDEVO::HILLIGRASS | | Tue Sep 29 1987 17:45 | 9 |
|
Feeling resentment is normal when a person is unable
to conceive or carry a child. At one point in time I
would get physically sick to my stomach when I saw a
happy pregnant woman. This to me seemed a bit overboard
but I paid a shrink $75.00 an hour to tell me that I wasn't
going off the deep end. Whew! That was close! :*)
- Sue
|
253.27 | a big problem | ARMORY::CHARBONND | Common sense isn't. Pity. | Wed Sep 30 1987 15:03 | 6 |
| The new issue of U.S. News & World Report has a 6-page cover story
on this subject. Oct 6 issue, I think. Included is a list of
helpful groups, books, and adoption agencies, for any wishing to
pursue that alternative.
Dana
|
253.28 | Books on infertility | FRSBEE::GIUNTA | | Tue Jan 26 1988 12:37 | 22 |
| I just read a book called "How To Get Pregnant" by Sherman J. Silber,
MD (ISBN 0-684-16508-2) which was recommended by my doctor. I found
it to be highly informative and easy to read. Everything is written
in layman's terms and things are repeated where applicable so that
you don't spend lots of time with "see section xxx" and forget what
you were reading to start with. I learned a lot about the process
to locate the problem and about infertility in general.
One interesting point that was brought up several times is that
even if the problem is with the man, they treat the woman to get
her to maximum fertility. I guess it is next to impossible to treat
the man and have any good results, so they treat the woman who has
a much better chance of responding to treatment leading to conception.
Another book which my doctor recommended is "Infertility: A Guide
for the Childless Couple" by Barbara Menning, Prentice Hall Publishers
(ISBN 0-13-464438-7). This book was written by the founder of Resolve,
and I have sent for a copy. I'll post a quick review of it after
I have read it for anyone else who may be interested.
Cathy
|
253.29 | News! | VIKING::TARBET | | Thu Jan 28 1988 10:02 | 97 |
| The response below is from the basenote author (I think)
=maggie
===================================================================
I just received a letter from RESOLVE about the Infertility Benefits
Bill. Massachusetts residents, please write a letter supporting the
regulations.
In case you don't know, IVF [In Vitro Fertilization] costs $5000. each
month you try it. It involves taking a fertility drug to increase the
number of eggs ripened in a cycle. Ultrasound is used to monitor the
egg growth (lots of Dr. visits), and a laparoscopy (oh no, day surgery
again!) or an ultrasound-guided aspiration is performed to harvest the
eggs. The sperm cells from the father are mixed with the harvested
eggs (this is why they're called test tube babies) and if the resulting
embryos are developing normally, the embryos are placed in the uterus.
This is done with a tube or catheter inserted into the vagina through
the cervix and into the uterus.
Now some statistics:
Recovery rate for harvesting ripened eggs: 90-100%
Fertilization success: very high
Birth rate: 14-20%
From Resolve:
"Most of you know by now that the Infertility Benefits Bill passed last
October; Chapter 394 of the Acts of 1987 took effect January 6, 1988.
The same day, the Massachusetts Division of Insurance issued emergency
regulations intended to explain what compliance with the new law means.
The Division reversed the usual procedure by publishing the Regulations
before holding public hearings. A hearing will, however, take place on
Tuesday, February 9, 1988 at 10:00 a.m.
Massachusetts Division of Insurance
100 Cambridge Street, Boston MA, 18th floor.
*Public Hearing.* Since permanent regulations will not be published
until after the public hearing, it is extremely important that
supporters of the bill express positive support for the emergency
regulations in order to offset what the Insurance Division expects will
be unified opposition from the insurance companies, who clearly found
less to their liking in the regulations than we did.
If you can, please plan to attend the hearing on February 9. And in
any event, *write to the Division* to explain how important the bill
and the Regulations are to you or others close to you. Be
specific--our personal stories are our most powerful ammunition-- and
write as soon as you can to:
Roger M. Singer
Commissioner, Division of Insurance
100 Cambridge Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02202.
*The Regulations.* ... The regulations require insurers to cover all
"non-experimental" infertility procedures, specifically including IVF
and AI [Artificial Insemination]. (GIFT unfortunately is not covered,
because it is still considered to be experimental. But the
commissioner can--and, we believe, will--require coverage of GIFT and
other new technologies as soon as the American Fertility Society (AFS)
or American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG), or other
fertility experts recognized by the Commissioner determine that they
are no longer experimental.) Certain other procedures, such as
reversal of voluntary sterilization, are also not required to be
covered.
Insurers are prohibited from imposing waiting periods or other
restrictions on infertility coverage that are different from those they
apply to other non-fertility-related conditions or procedures, and
insurers may not exclude coverage on the basis of a pre-existing
condition. Insurers are, however, permitted to establish reasonable
medical eligibility requirements for covered procedures, and reasonable
medical standards governing IVF clinics and other providers of covered
procedures. These must be written, and must be provided to any insured
who asks for them. The insurers say they are now in the process of
preparing schedules of charges for IVF and other covered procedures,
and these and any eligibility and provider standards they adopt will be
subject to review by the Division for reasonableness.
...
The coming months will be important for the future of infertility
benefits in the Commonwealth, as permanent regulations are adopted by
the Division of Insurance and insurers gradually (and finally!) adapt
to the arrival of the 20th century. Pass the good news around--make
sure your doctor gets a copy of the Regulations, for example--and
insist on your rights. For the first time, infertility patients seem to
have the Division of Insurance as an advocate, and with Chapter 394 and
the Regulations in place, a strong hand to play. Congratulations! "
|
253.30 | IVF | CSC32::JOHNS | Yes, I am *still* pregnant :-) | Thu Jan 28 1988 15:27 | 6 |
| Does the birth rate of 14-20% mean that 20% of the fertilized eggs
will be born as babies, or does it mean that 20% of the time a woman
goes through this procedure that she will give birth to a living
child?
Carol
|