Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The PITA appointments are the same with IUI and IVF.
This may be true for NCIVF (I wouldn't know), but it's absolutely not true for medicated IVF. It is a far far more involved process than IUI.
If you have a 15% chance of IUI working per cycle, I say keep your expectations in check and do it.
Than a medicated IUI?
Yup. With my medicated IUIs, I usually had to go in twice before the IUI itself. With an egg retrieval, I probably had 10 appointments before I got to the egg retrieval day.
With my IUIs, I had to go in basically every other day at first and then daily toward the end. I guess it's different for everyone. The only difference for me was retrieval which was stressful, but considering the odds are much better, I was happy to do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IUIs are MUCH cheaper than IVF for most. With my insurance, it was approximately 10-20 IUIs (depending on meds) equalled 1 IVF. So, if you have unexplained infertility (i.e., not an obvious problem that IVF is needed to solve), then just the extra follicles + perfect timing + shorter journey from IUIs might be enough. If time isn't a huge factor (in my case, I thought sub-37, I was willing to burn a year), then starting with IUIs make sense.
In my case, it took 5 IUIs to get there. 3 at $600 (just w/ clomid; testing covered by insurance) and 2 at ~$2,000 (injectables were the price difference, but med levels are much lower than with IVF). So, I spent $6,000 and 5 months in the end. Cheaper than one round of IVF (and with less injectables) and maybe not even all that much slower once all the prep work, etc for the IVF is taken into account... and IVF may have taken multiple cycles to work.
That's more than I paid for 1 round of natural cycle IVF, OOP.
Anonymous wrote:Is IUI worth it if there is no male factor but the issue is decreased ovarian reserve?
Anonymous wrote:IUIs are MUCH cheaper than IVF for most. With my insurance, it was approximately 10-20 IUIs (depending on meds) equalled 1 IVF. So, if you have unexplained infertility (i.e., not an obvious problem that IVF is needed to solve), then just the extra follicles + perfect timing + shorter journey from IUIs might be enough. If time isn't a huge factor (in my case, I thought sub-37, I was willing to burn a year), then starting with IUIs make sense.
In my case, it took 5 IUIs to get there. 3 at $600 (just w/ clomid; testing covered by insurance) and 2 at ~$2,000 (injectables were the price difference, but med levels are much lower than with IVF). So, I spent $6,000 and 5 months in the end. Cheaper than one round of IVF (and with less injectables) and maybe not even all that much slower once all the prep work, etc for the IVF is taken into account... and IVF may have taken multiple cycles to work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The PITA appointments are the same with IUI and IVF.
This may be true for NCIVF (I wouldn't know), but it's absolutely not true for medicated IVF. It is a far far more involved process than IUI.
If you have a 15% chance of IUI working per cycle, I say keep your expectations in check and do it.
Than a medicated IUI?
Yup. With my medicated IUIs, I usually had to go in twice before the IUI itself. With an egg retrieval, I probably had 10 appointments before I got to the egg retrieval day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The PITA appointments are the same with IUI and IVF.
This may be true for NCIVF (I wouldn't know), but it's absolutely not true for medicated IVF. It is a far far more involved process than IUI.
If you have a 15% chance of IUI working per cycle, I say keep your expectations in check and do it.
Than a medicated IUI?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The PITA appointments are the same with IUI and IVF.
This may be true for NCIVF (I wouldn't know), but it's absolutely not true for medicated IVF. It is a far far more involved process than IUI.
If you have a 15% chance of IUI working per cycle, I say keep your expectations in check and do it.