Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've heard that lots of enlisted military wives are doing this to supplement their incomes, especially while husbands are gone on missions. It's quite hard for such military wives to develop careers as they move pretty often.
I am an retired enlisted wife and I have never heard of it. Tricare is very generous depending what but there are not lots of enlisted women doing it.
I'm the wife of a retired officer and I have known women (both wives of SNCOs) that have done it. In fact, both the women I know who did it, did it twice.
Personally, I don't think Tricare should allow coverage, unless of course the intended parents were also covered under Tricare.
What difference does it make to you? The purpose of insurance is to provide health care to a covered person and treatment for that person's body. So if the baby in the surrogate's stomach belongs to another couple, her husband or even a rapist, the insurance covers HER body - not the baby in her tummy. No sweat off your back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've heard that lots of enlisted military wives are doing this to supplement their incomes, especially while husbands are gone on missions. It's quite hard for such military wives to develop careers as they move pretty often.
I am an retired enlisted wife and I have never heard of it. Tricare is very generous depending what but there are not lots of enlisted women doing it.
I'm the wife of a retired officer and I have known women (both wives of SNCOs) that have done it. In fact, both the women I know who did it, did it twice.
Personally, I don't think Tricare should allow coverage, unless of course the intended parents were also covered under Tricare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've heard that lots of enlisted military wives are doing this to supplement their incomes, especially while husbands are gone on missions. It's quite hard for such military wives to develop careers as they move pretty often.
I am an retired enlisted wife and I have never heard of it. Tricare is very generous depending what but there are not lots of enlisted women doing it.
Anonymous wrote:Do your family and the GC's family ever get together now? If so, what, if anything, do you plan to tell your child about the relationship?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you create embryos prior to matching? Or did you search for a GC during the IVF process?
I was very lucky that I had a couple of frozen embryos. We only searched for a GC after it was determined I could not possibly carry a pregnancy to term.
How did they determine you can't carry?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you create embryos prior to matching? Or did you search for a GC during the IVF process?
I was very lucky that I had a couple of frozen embryos. We only searched for a GC after it was determined I could not possibly carry a pregnancy to term.
Anonymous wrote:I've heard that lots of enlisted military wives are doing this to supplement their incomes, especially while husbands are gone on missions. It's quite hard for such military wives to develop careers as they move pretty often.
Anonymous wrote:Did you create embryos prior to matching? Or did you search for a GC during the IVF process?
Anonymous wrote:For OP and others who were able to use your GC's health insurance to cover Surrogacy costs, were you advised to keep the fact that it was a Surrogacy kind of hush hush? Or was it not a problem at all? Using the GC's plan kind of feels like fraud to me, but I'm finding that there aren't that many options other than paying for the whole thing out of pocket.
After the baby was born, how quickly were you able to add the baby to your own health insurance?
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for posting this! We're just starting our journey so it was really helpful to read all of this info.

Anonymous wrote:For OP and others who were able to use your GC's health insurance to cover Surrogacy costs, were you advised to keep the fact that it was a Surrogacy kind of hush hush? Or was it not a problem at all? Using the GC's plan kind of feels like fraud to me, but I'm finding that there aren't that many options other than paying for the whole thing out of pocket.
After the baby was born, how quickly were you able to add the baby to your own health insurance?