Chanceforlove.com
   Russian wives are worth your attention

Essentials archive:
Resources archive:
Articles archive:
Facts on Russia:


Better NHS funding of fertility treatment will be crucial to the prevention of hazardous twin and triplet births, the IVF watchdog said yesterday as it announced a national strategy to reduce rates of multiple pregnancies.

Date: 2007-12-12

The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) expects clinics to
cut the proportion of twin and triplet pregnancies from one in four to one
in ten over three years. Multiple births are the biggest health risk in IVF.

Instead of backing the target with the threat of restrictions on the
transfer of multiple embryos, the regulator has chosen a voluntary approach
by which professional groups will draw up guidelines on how it should be
achieved. It called on the Government to pay for more free cycles of
treatment to make the plan work.

Walter Merricks, the interim chairman of the HFEA, has written to Dawn
Primarolo, the Health Minister, to press the case for better access. The
National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence recommends that three
cycles of IVF should be offered to women under 40, yet the Government asks
primary care trusts to offer just one and many have imposed restrictions on
which patients qualify.

Mr Merricks said: "We always have in mind that still the greatest risk in
the eyes of patients is the risk of not having a baby." Increased NHS
funding for IVF was the key, he said: "Women with access to only one funded
cycle of treatment are only acting rationally if they beg for a double
embryo transfer in their single chance of becoming pregnant. The risk of a
twin pregnancy seems nothing to the risk of no pregnancy."
His comments were backed by Professor Peter Braude, of King's College
London, who led an expert panel that advised the HFEA on reducing multiple
births. "It is important that there should be some comeback from the
Department of Health to include frozen cycles or pay for at least two cycles
for all patients," he said.

To achieve the 10 per cent target, about 50 per cent of women having IVF,
most of them first-time patients under 35, would have just one embryo
transferred at a time. Currently only about 10 per cent have a single embryo
transfer.

Twins and triplets are much more likely to be stillborn, to die in the first
week of life, to be disabled or to be born prematurely than a single baby.
Mothers also have a greater risk of life-threatening conditions such as
pre-eclampsia and heart attacks. The HFEA estimates that 126 IVF babies who
died in 2003 would have survived had they been single births.

Modern techniques mean that success rates with one embryo can be just as
good as with two for young women with a good prognosis, but only if a
back-up cycle of treatment with a frozen embryo is offered. Very few NHS
trusts provide this and about 75 per cent of IVF patients pay for their own
treatment.

IVF treatment accounts for only 1.2 per cent of all births, but for nearly
20 per cent of multiple births. Although the HFEA has already restricted
embryo transfers to a maximum of two for most patients, the latest data show
a slight increase in multiple births from 2004 to 2005.

Mark Hamilton, the chairman of the British Fertility Society, agreed that
better NHS provision would be critical to reversing this trend and backed
the HFEA's voluntary approach.

Source: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/science/article2997759.ece





Your First Name
Your Email Address

     Privacy Guaranteed



GL52080057 GL52081914 GL52081962 GL52068236


  

      SCANNED April 20, 2024





Dating industry related news
New website offers legal advice and guidance for foreign wivesCan A Person Be Illegal?The Rise of Mixed Marriages
Foreign-born women who plan to be married in Canada,whether as mail-order brides or through an arranged marriage or matchmakingservice, may soon have a new online resource to help them figure out theirrights under Canadian law.The website, www.lawforforeignbrides.ca, is a joint effort between theUniversity of Alberta's faculty of extension, the Legal Resource Centre, theAlberta Law Foundation and the Changing Together organization.The site covers a gamut of topics ranging from issues to consider...In all the furor over rising immigration rates in the U.S. -- oftendisguised as concern over "illegal" immigration -- one story in particulardemonstrates that contrary to scare stories about the effect of immigrationon this country, the reality is that this country is often a scary andoppressive place for immigrants. And immigrant women, having drawn thedouble whammy card, are especially vulnerable. A 22-year-old immigrant fromColombia exposed her immigration agent using the threat of deportatio...Our city took in 40.4% of all newcomers to Canada between 2001 and 2006 — it has the largest number of visible minorities in the country with 2.17 million or 42.9% of Toronto's population — thus diversifying the dating pool.It makes sense that mixed marriages in the country are on the rise - Stats Can counted 289,400 mixed unions in 2006, 33% higher than the 2001 figures.It strikes me for the first time that none of my friends are partnered with people of their own ethnicity. (Perhaps the fact t...
read more >>read more >>read more >>
ChanceForLove Online Russian Dating Network Copyright © 2003 - 2023 , all rights reserved.
No part of this site may be reproduced or copied without written permission from ChanceForLove.com