Technology6 mins ago
IVF on the NHS......
http://tinyurl.com/nue442
A lottery it seems but given that there is no shortage of people, should IVF be available free at all?
BGB's are available for this question!
A lottery it seems but given that there is no shortage of people, should IVF be available free at all?
BGB's are available for this question!
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No best answer has yet been selected by R1Geezer. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.No, it should not be free.
Having children is a lifestyle choice - I don't see why I should pay for somebody's lifestyle choice.
Neither should I have to pay for sex changes (or gender reassignment or realignment or whatever cobblers they are calling it these days) or tattoo removal or any other such fripperies.
Having children is a lifestyle choice - I don't see why I should pay for somebody's lifestyle choice.
Neither should I have to pay for sex changes (or gender reassignment or realignment or whatever cobblers they are calling it these days) or tattoo removal or any other such fripperies.
For a very long time now there has been a lot of people in this country , who were born here .
Almost all of us born here, I would say are glad that we were born .
Given that we were born - what would we say now , if our mother had difficulty conceiving and couldn't afford to pay for available treatment ?
Almost all of us born here, I would say are glad that we were born .
Given that we were born - what would we say now , if our mother had difficulty conceiving and couldn't afford to pay for available treatment ?
I don't think IVF should be free unless you've had a cancer or some such illness. No one is born with a right to have children, (myself included, there's a chance I might not be able to).
You do have to pay to have your sperm stored for a maximum of ten years, it's initally �300 (sperm extracted, checked and the stored, you get �200 back if they find nothing) and then �100 per year off the top of my head. You only don't have to pay for this if you've had a cancer. I'm not sure how it works from a female perspective however.
You do have to pay to have your sperm stored for a maximum of ten years, it's initally �300 (sperm extracted, checked and the stored, you get �200 back if they find nothing) and then �100 per year off the top of my head. You only don't have to pay for this if you've had a cancer. I'm not sure how it works from a female perspective however.
china where were you when I needed you
http://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/Body-and-Soul/Q uestion472478-2.html
http://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/Body-and-Soul/Q uestion472478-2.html
Such kind and understanding people on here, not! Till you have been in the position yourself you won't know how much stress this can cause and pressure on a marriage. Next you'll be saying people shouldn't get drugs for cancer on the NHS. but should have to pay! Or if you have an accident, it's your fault because you shouldn't be having a day out. That's my one and only comment because people like some of you make me sick!
It must be a wonderful thing to be so perfect.
It must be a wonderful thing to be so perfect.
It's nothing to do with being perfect Jan1957, it's about whether you think IVF is something that should be paid for on the NHS.
As it stands most of the fertility problems I deal with are not to do with people who have been sick and as a result are now infertile, the majority just can not concieve naturally and want to have their own child. That's absolutely fine, go for it but pay for it yourself. Or you can take part in an exchange scheme as well (you donate eggs to another woman and in turn get half your IVF funded I think). I've no problems with this but I don't think it's necessary. Unlike the gender re-assigment, it does not fall under mental health guidelines. It's jut because people want to have their 'own' child.
As to the stress it puts on to marriages, well I do agree with that, I see it alot. But I think it's the sort of thing you discuss before getting married. I've discussed it with ex boyfirends in the past. One absolutely didn't want kids, the other did but knew that it might not happen but that I was willing to be tested if it was going to be a deal breaker for him. It wasn't a deal breaker so I didn't get tested.
As it stands most of the fertility problems I deal with are not to do with people who have been sick and as a result are now infertile, the majority just can not concieve naturally and want to have their own child. That's absolutely fine, go for it but pay for it yourself. Or you can take part in an exchange scheme as well (you donate eggs to another woman and in turn get half your IVF funded I think). I've no problems with this but I don't think it's necessary. Unlike the gender re-assigment, it does not fall under mental health guidelines. It's jut because people want to have their 'own' child.
As to the stress it puts on to marriages, well I do agree with that, I see it alot. But I think it's the sort of thing you discuss before getting married. I've discussed it with ex boyfirends in the past. One absolutely didn't want kids, the other did but knew that it might not happen but that I was willing to be tested if it was going to be a deal breaker for him. It wasn't a deal breaker so I didn't get tested.