Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you do a cycle for collection that is timed/adheres to the guidelines? As long as you have embryos, you can wait the 8 weeks without too much worry. I would arrange to not go to Florida for awhile--a solid year or so while you concentrate on IF treatments and getting pregnant. I can understand the guidelines being strict. No doctor wants a microcephaly baby on their conscience. I think it might be an ethics issure for them.
This is ridiculous. So if you have family, you're just supposed to not see them for a yeAr+? Or not travel for work? Then I assume once you get preg, no going down for atleast first tri either??
Yes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you do a cycle for collection that is timed/adheres to the guidelines? As long as you have embryos, you can wait the 8 weeks without too much worry. I would arrange to not go to Florida for awhile--a solid year or so while you concentrate on IF treatments and getting pregnant. I can understand the guidelines being strict. No doctor wants a microcephaly baby on their conscience. I think it might be an ethics issure for them.
This is ridiculous. So if you have family, you're just supposed to not see them for a yeAr+? Or not travel for work? Then I assume once you get preg, no going down for atleast first tri either??
Anonymous wrote:Can you do a cycle for collection that is timed/adheres to the guidelines? As long as you have embryos, you can wait the 8 weeks without too much worry. I would arrange to not go to Florida for awhile--a solid year or so while you concentrate on IF treatments and getting pregnant. I can understand the guidelines being strict. No doctor wants a microcephaly baby on their conscience. I think it might be an ethics issure for them.
Anonymous wrote:Your physician's recommendation came from the CDC.https://www.cdc.gov/zika/. If you disagree with it which you obviously do, I'm sure you are an educate medical professional, so then you do whatever you want. It's your body. But you are fully informed and aware of the risks. Take your chances. If you are worried about Floridians what about those South America with zero access to healthcare services. Many zika countries with poor healthcare infrastructures can't implement the CDC recommendations. Women living in poverty are getting pregnant everyday in Brazil, if given the choice I'm sure they would prefer to conceive in a non-zika location. It does not mean the CDC should stop informing the public about the best recommendations based on current information about the virus. The recommendations will change as CDC does more research and has better understanding of the virus. In the meantime you can chose to follow the recommendations or not.
Anonymous wrote:Fertility clinics haven't shut down, but you have no idea what precautions they are taking and what they are advising their patients. Your doctor is telling you what his protocol is when it comes to potential exposure, and you're just dismissing it because you don't like the answer. I understand that you want to have a child, but do you want to have a child that's been exposed to Zika because you didn't want to wait?