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Ovulation and Pregnancy
Menstrual Cycle
Female Reproductive
Health
Age Fertility
Delay Motherhood
Female Biological Clock
Egg Freezing
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Delay Motherhood - Delay Parenthood
Do you have questions about delaying motherhood? Welcome
to LaterBaby, a complete female fertility educational resource for any
woman who sees children in her future. Later Baby is pleased to inform
its community that there is now the availability of a new female fertility
service designed to help women delay motherhood and delay parenthood by
safeguarding their younger, healthier eggs for the time when they are
ready to start their families. This
egg freezing service delays
motherhood and delays parenthood by effectively slowing the biological
clock and increases the chances of having a genetically-linked child after
40. Having the option to delay motherhood and delay parenthood by egg
freezing is expected to appeal to a broad range of women – from cancer
patients facing chemotherapy and women facing family histories of female
fertility problems, to single, professional women and couples who would
prefer to day motherhood and delay parenthood and start their families
later in life.
Test your knowledge of pregnancy, ovulation, menstrual cycles, and female
fertility by taking our
Free
Female Fertility Quiz.
New Fertility Programs can help Delay Motherhood and Delay Parenthood
"Women now have options to protect their future fertility,” said Christy
Jones, founder and CEO, Extend Fertility. “It is our mission to help women
address the ever-growing disconnect between the readiness to have children
and the biological limitations of aging eggs.”
Eggs are the key to female fertility. Female fertility and egg quality
peak around the age of 27 and begin to decline in a woman's 30s. While a
woman is physically able to carry a pregnancy to term well into her
forties, the quality of the eggs produced by a woman’s ovaries begins to
significantly decline starting around the age of 35. A woman over age 40 has less than a 10 percent chance of having a successful pregnancy using
her own eggs, compared to approximately 30 percent per month at her natural peak
fertility.
Older eggs also run a much higher risk – about 10 times higher - of
chromosomal defects which can lead to conditions, such as Down’s syndrome,
in children. As a result, women often spend an average of more than
$50,000 on infertility treatments or as much as $50,000 to secure donor
eggs in order to delay motherhood and have healthy children later in life.
New Egg Freezing technology leverages recent female fertility advancements
in
oocyte cryopreservation science and enables women who have previously
frozen their eggs to improve their pregnancy rate to between 20 and 30
percent, and delay motherhood with egg banking services.
Later Baby's educational sponsor, Extend Fertility, partners with local
fertility clinics to
offer a nationwide network of fertility centers where women can go to have
their eggs harvested and preserved. Strategic relationships have been formed
with industry leaders to provide women with the best available egg
freezing science,
medical service,
egg storage
facility and female fertility education.
To learn more about age and fertility and the new
alternative that allows women to delay motherhood and couples to delay
parenthood call Extend Fertility: 800-841-7197 or
Join the Later Baby
Community.
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