Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all the good advice. I will probably switch clinics to one with nurses who are better at drawing blood because that is a huge part of the problem.
To respond to the comment above, my insurance covers IUI but not IVF, so it is worth trying at least a few times. One issue though is we’re using donor sperm and that stuff is expensive! (~$1000 a vial, not counting the expensive shipping, storage, thawing, and prepping!). I will have to price it out and compare.
For the price of a cycle I would definitely just put up with all the blood draws. It just increases the likelihood of success in my non medical opinion.
If it’s helpful info, Columbia Fertility only has one tech to draw blood M-F during early lab hours, it’s a different person Saturday. I’m not a hard draw, but I thought she was really good!
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all the good advice. I will probably switch clinics to one with nurses who are better at drawing blood because that is a huge part of the problem.
To respond to the comment above, my insurance covers IUI but not IVF, so it is worth trying at least a few times. One issue though is we’re using donor sperm and that stuff is expensive! (~$1000 a vial, not counting the expensive shipping, storage, thawing, and prepping!). I will have to price it out and compare.
Anonymous wrote:I got pregnant on my first IUI and don’t remember it being a ridiculous amount of blood draws, partly because the amount of blood draws I had while pregnant was insane (they were checking me early on for progesterone every few days and then later for a few things which I’m very grateful for). So I’d say your best bet is to get used to it and prepare for it for - hopefully! - the long-haul.
Anonymous wrote:Skip the IUI, OP. Just go straight to IVF plan. It will save you a ton of time, $$, and heartache.