Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I switched from shady grove to GW 9 years ago. Shady Frove’s billing department was terrible back then— a total headache.
The process is time consuming, so if you don’t know of complex fertility problems, I would prioritize proximity, appointment times and an organized front desk/billing department. GW worked for me because all monitoring was by walk-in between 7am and 9:30am and I could park at Whole Foods across the street. I was in and out in 15 minutes. Took me 3 years to maintain a pregnancy, so I was there a lot.
I think GW was taken over by Shady Grove![]()
Anonymous wrote:I switched from shady grove to GW 9 years ago. Shady Frove’s billing department was terrible back then— a total headache.
The process is time consuming, so if you don’t know of complex fertility problems, I would prioritize proximity, appointment times and an organized front desk/billing department. GW worked for me because all monitoring was by walk-in between 7am and 9:30am and I could park at Whole Foods across the street. I was in and out in 15 minutes. Took me 3 years to maintain a pregnancy, so I was there a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am an old time infertility patient— and i just hated shady grove so i would tell you to go anywhere else. Tho things may have changed (my donor egg kids are 24, 21 and 21). If Preston Sacks is still in the business, i liked him.
I’m the poster from above. Preston was the BEST. My kids are 24 and 20. We were probably in the waiting room at the same time.
Looks like he is still with Columbia. Abassi is also there. She’s very smart but can be rough around the edges.
https://www.columbiafertility.com/
Any idea why Columbia's SART data is so much worse than the rest? Do they take on more complicated cases?
Yup, you got it. They also take on reproductive immune and recurring loss patients. Most clinics would have quit on me to save their stats, but Dr Abbasi keeps letting me try despite the low odds. I have good insurance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go to ccrm, no question.
That was my first choice, especially since their DC office is only a few blocks from my work. BUT I'm having trouble getting a straight answer on whether Cigna is fully or partially in-network.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am an old time infertility patient— and i just hated shady grove so i would tell you to go anywhere else. Tho things may have changed (my donor egg kids are 24, 21 and 21). If Preston Sacks is still in the business, i liked him.
I’m the poster from above. Preston was the BEST. My kids are 24 and 20. We were probably in the waiting room at the same time.
Looks like he is still with Columbia. Abassi is also there. She’s very smart but can be rough around the edges.
https://www.columbiafertility.com/
Any idea why Columbia's SART data is so much worse than the rest? Do they take on more complicated cases?
Anonymous wrote:Go to ccrm, no question.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am an old time infertility patient— and i just hated shady grove so i would tell you to go anywhere else. Tho things may have changed (my donor egg kids are 24, 21 and 21). If Preston Sacks is still in the business, i liked him.
I’m the poster from above. Preston was the BEST. My kids are 24 and 20. We were probably in the waiting room at the same time.
Looks like he is still with Columbia. Abassi is also there. She’s very smart but can be rough around the edges.
https://www.columbiafertility.com/
Anonymous wrote:I am an old time infertility patient— and i just hated shady grove so i would tell you to go anywhere else. Tho things may have changed (my donor egg kids are 24, 21 and 21). If Preston Sacks is still in the business, i liked him.
Anonymous wrote:Cigna is going to cover this despite no diagnosis of infertility? Seriously?
They will cover all the prep to get the eggs, extract and fertilize. And then they will cover implanting in a different mother.
I’m just shocked. Go for it.
As for what clinic to use, pick the one that is closest to home or work for the partner who will be having the eggs extracted.
—old time lesbian & mother of college students who, despite having excellent insurance, had to pay out of pocket for IUIs and all infertility treatments when it didn’t work as quickly for kid number 2