Postponing Motherhood Places Too Much Faith in Reproductive Science: Experts
By Sharon Kirkey, Postmedia News,
Montreal Gazette
| 11. 17. 2011
The growing numbers of women postponing motherhood are placing too much blind faith in science to help them conceive when they're ready to have a baby.
That's the warning being issued by this country's pregnancy specialists.
The Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada — which has just issued new guidelines to doctors on "advanced reproductive age" and fertility — worries that women are overestimating the success rates of artificial procreation.
Short of using a younger woman's donated eggs, no assisted baby-making technology today can get around the reality that the supply and quality of a woman's eggs shrinks over time — and that by the time a woman reaches her early to mid-30s, each egg offers less chance of pregnancy and a higher risk of miscarriage.
More women over 40 are now seeking treatment for infertility — even though the failure rate for that age group is close to 90 per cent, fertility experts say.
"Fertility treatments aren't a sure-fire route to pregnancy — their rates of success are greatly influenced by age-related declines in fertility," Dr. Allison Case...
Related Articles
By Josie Ensor, The Times | 12.09.2025
A fertility start-up that promises to screen embryos to give would-be parents their “best baby” has come under fire for a “misuse of science”.
Nucleus Genomics describes its mission as “IVF for genetic optimisation”, offering advanced embryo testing that allows...
By Katherine Long, Ben Foldy, and Lingling Wei, The Wall Street Journal | 12.13.2025
Inside a closed Los Angeles courtroom, something wasn’t right.
Clerks working for family court Judge Amy Pellman were reviewing routine surrogacy petitions when they spotted an unusual pattern: the same name, again and again.
A Chinese billionaire was seeking parental...
By Sarah A. Topol, The New York Times Magazine | 12.14.2025
The women in House 3 rarely had a chance to speak to the women in House 5, but when they did, the things they heard scared them. They didn’t actually know where House 5 was, only that it was huge...
By Tina Stevens, CounterPunch | 12.11.2025
Silicon Valley and other high tech billionaires are investing millions in start-ups dedicated to creating genetically engineered (GE) babies, according to a recent Wall Street Journal (WSJ) report. AI mogul Sam Altman, cryptocurrency entrepreneur Brian Armstrong, venture capitalist Peter...