Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Women freeze their eggs for a myriad of reasons, but most do so because they have yet to find the right partner, research shows.
New figures from Adora Fertility shows the number of women freezing their eggs has increased by nearly 50 per cent between 2023 and 2025. Meanwhile the average age has dropped from 37 to 35 — a clear ...
For her new book Motherhood on Ice: The Mating Gap and Why Women Freeze Their Eggs, Yale University professor Marcia C. Inhorn talked to more than 150 women who had pursued egg freezing. I chatted ...
The time of year when eggs are collected from women’s ovaries during fertility treatment makes a difference to live birth rates, according to new research published today (Thursday) in Human ...
Women are increasingly pursuing higher education and establishing themselves professionally later in life. Egg freezing offers them the freedom to chase these ambitions without the pressure of a ...
A few weeks into the new year, several of my friends did something they’d never done before: they created a vision board. An ...
Egg freezing has found its way back into social media timelines, and this time, it's not through glossy clinic ads or celebrity interviews, but through a single line spoken by Upasana Konnidela.
Upasana Konnidela, during her visit to IIT Hyderabad, as the Vice Chairperson of Corporate Social Responsibility at Apollo Hospitals, she told students: “The biggest insurance for women is to save ...
Female fertility is a complex and fascinating process influenced by various biological factors. One of the most critical aspects of fertility is the ovarian reserve – essentially, the number and ...
“You will not have a child with your own eggs,” were the hardest words to hear. They were delivered late last year to one of your authors and her partner, after five years of failed IVF, by a doctor ...