Struggling to start a family? Your baby may be closer than you think.
Your arms wait to be filled; your miracle is closer than you think.
A Reality Check: Science Over Stigma
Demystifying the “Secret Formulas”
- Time-Lapse Embryo Monitoring & DFI: Tools such as time-lapse incubators and DNA Fragmentation Index (DFI) testing enable embryologists to select the healthiest possible embryos and sperm.
- Genetic Precision: Technologies like Preimplantation Genetic Testing (PGT-A and PGT-M) ensure that embryos are screened for genetic abnormalities before transfer, significantly reducing the risk of recurrent miscarriages.
- Advanced Injections: Techniques like Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection (ICSI) directly address severe male infertility factors by assisting the fertilisation process under a microscope.
Easing the Financial and Emotional Burden
The Road Ahead
Understanding IVF: How Does It Work?
Simply put, In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) is a helping hand from science. In this process, doctors combine a healthy egg and sperm outside the body in a specialized lab to create an embryo. That embryo is then safely placed into the mother’s womb. If you are dealing with unexplained infertility, PCOS, blocked tubes, or male fertility issues, IVF offers a proven and hopeful path to parenthood.
No, IVF is not highly painful. The daily injections use very tiny needles, similar to insulin pens. The egg retrieval process is done under mild anesthesia, so you will be asleep and feel no pain.
One complete cycle usually takes about 3 to 4 weeks. This includes taking medicines to grow eggs, retrieving them, fertilizing them in the lab, and transferring the embryo.
In IUI, healthy sperm is simply placed inside the uterus during ovulation. In IVF, eggs are removed, fertilized with sperm in a lab to create an embryo, and then placed into the uterus.
Yes, absolutely. Millions of babies have been born through IVF worldwide. They are just as healthy, intelligent, and normal as babies conceived naturally.
Severe side effects are very rare. Most women only feel mild changes like bloating, mood swings, slight breast tenderness, or light cramping due to the fertility medicines.
Yes, you can carry on with your normal life and work during the injection phase. Doctors only advise a few days of strict rest right after the embryo transfer procedure.
Please do not lose hope. A failed cycle gives your doctor valuable information about your body. Many couples who do not succeed the first time go on to have a healthy baby on their second or third try.
No, not always. In the past, doctors placed multiple embryos in the uterus, which caused twins. Today, advanced clinics usually transfer just one healthy embryo. This makes the pregnancy much safer for both the mother and the baby.
Yes, you can. If you want to delay motherhood or have extra embryos from your IVF cycle, the clinic can safely freeze them. These frozen eggs or embryos can remain safe for many years until you are ready.
Understanding IVF: How Does It Work? Simply put, In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) is a helping hand from science. In this process, doctors combine a healthy egg and sperm outside the body in a specialized lab to create an embryo. That embryo is then safely placed into the mother's womb. If you are dealing with unexplained infertility, PCOS, blocked tubes, or male fertility issues, IVF offers a proven and hopeful path to parenthood.
World-class care does not have to mean financial ruin.
Discover how India has become a global hub precisely because it offers highly advanced reproductive care at a fraction of global costs.
