The story of Anna Johnson reveals what is clearly a growing trend. Johnson, a working-class African-American woman who had been on welfare, was hired by a white man and his Filipina wife to have their embryo implanted in her uterus.
This book is for you if Your inability to get pregnant is causing you confusion and anxiety. You can't figure out who to tell about your infertility (or how much to confide). You are not getting the support you need.
Full of practical tips and true stories, this book will guide couples past the ethical pitfalls of assisted reproductive technologies as they travel the difficult road ahead.An all-encompassing guide for the Christian infertility patient.
Both clinical and laboratory techniques are included, with material on preconception care. New to this edition are chapters on fertility care for the LGBT community, endometriosis, elective egg freezing, and effective nursing.
Honoré and Nemiro "explain how doctors reach a diagnosis and they discuss the latest treatments, ranging from ovulation-stimulating drugs to assisted reproductive technologies"--P. [4] of cover.
This edition also includes extensive appendixes of clinical tools useful to the clinician, including an Internet database of resources and an extensive glossary of terminology.
In Misconception, Ann V. Bell overturns such historically ingrained notions of infertility by examining the experiences of poor women and women of color. These women, so the stereotype would have it, are simply too fertile.
These feelings are a natural and necessary form of grief. Whether you continue to hope to give birth or you've stopped pursuing pregnancy, this compassionate guide will help you affirm and express your feelings about infertility.
This book explores the science of infertility telling a personal story of the author's journey of trying to conceive a child.
"This book was written to help you see and understand that God is the Giver of life.