News0 min ago
Fertility Treatment
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Don't be afraid to phone up the department concerned and (calmly) ask what has happened. Give them a number to phone you back when they have had time to discuss it with the doctor concerned and ask when it is likely you will be seen. The whole situation sounds really difficult, but that's good that they have not found a specific problem. Also, be careful about believing newspaper reports as they often get health news wrong.
i wonder if you have considered saving up for treatment, or persueing other avenues, ie fostering/adoption? I only ask because i cant really see when the nhs will have more funds available, as it is in such crisis treating ill people, and i would guess that whatever your personal views, fertility treatment would be somewhere near the bottom of the list of priorities at a time when so many nhs staff are being laid off.. People are waiting weeks and weeks for radiotherapy/chemotherapy treatment, and it's an age old debate in medical ethics really, that just because medical science can do something, does it mean there is an imperative to do it? It probably sounds very unsympathetic of me, i know, but i am just saying it might be best to proceed with the thought that the funding might not ever become available again, then you cant be disappointed. The discrepancy in the story in the paper, might mean something along the lines of the couple waited 16 months to even be seen, or for the clomid treatment.
I am only saying the above stuff because that is probably how the pct views fertility treatment in your area - as the bottom of a very long list with a very unfavourable cost/benefit ratio, and really i suppose that is how it should be