In vitro fertilisation in a small unit in the NHS
- 12 March 1988
- Vol. 296 (6624) , 759-761
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.296.6624.759
Abstract
In vitro fertilisation is one of the most effective new treatments for infertility, but financial restrictions have made it impossible for it to be widely carried out in the National Health Service. We report on the establishment of a small, largely self funded, unit that was set up with the help of the local health service management. All cycles are programmed so that most work is carried out during the working week; oocyte recoveries are performed as outpatient procedures without general anaesthesia and guided by ultrasound. Roughly a tenth of treatment cycles and roughly a fifth of embryo transfers resulted in a clinical pregnancy.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Norethisterone treatment to control timing of the IVF cycleHuman Reproduction, 1986
- A simplified approach to uocyte recovery for in-vitro fertilizationBJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 1985
- Effect of delayed insemination on in-vitro fertilization, culture and transfer of human embryosReproduction, 1982
- COLLECTION OF HUMAN O CYTES FOR IN VITRO FERTILISATION BY ULTRASONICALLY GUIDED FOLLICULAR PUNCTUREThe Lancet, 1981