Aggregated News

In an essay recently published in the Wall Street Journal, Sarah Elizabeth Richards, author of the new book Motherhood Rescheduled, encourages women to ward off age-related infertility by simply freezing their eggs—like she did.

Between the ages of 36 and 38, Richards spent $50,000 to freeze 70 eggs that she plans to thaw, fertilize, and insert into her uterus when she is 44 or 46. “Egg freezing,” she said, “stopped the sadness that I was feeling at losing my chance to have the child I had dreamed about my entire life.” Still looking for a mate at almost 40, Richards says she now goes onto Match.com and has the confidence to tell men that she can “have kids whenever I want.”

While Richards’ decision appears to have provided her with a sense of hope and temporary emotional equilibrium, it may prove to be illusory. Sadly, as millions of women, including me, can attest, the vast majority of assisted reproductive technologies fail. In 2012, of the 1.5 million treatments performed globally, 1.1 million failed––a 77 percent failure rate...