Patients Reveal the Hidden Side of Fertility Treatments

NEW YORK, NY--(Marketwired - August 26, 2013) - As reproductive medicine heralds the birth of an estimated five million babies born via in-vitro fertilization (I.V.F.) since 1978, a group of infertility advocates and patients are convening the nation's first independent forum to draw public attention to the millions more couples whose treatments failed, and raise much needed awareness about the hidden emotional traumas, societal impacts, risks and myths associated with infertility, childlessness and treatments--including annual global failure rates as high as 77 percent in 2012.[1]

On Friday, September 27, 2013 in Lower Manhattan at the BMCC Tribeca Performing Arts Center Theater #2, The Cycle: Living A Taboo will convene patients, doctors, authors, filmmakers, and trauma therapists familiar with infertility and treatments for this long overdue public dialogue. The 90-minute program will include dramatic readings, film segments, and intentional conversations about stigma, hype vs. hope, and trading losses in for life. The Cycle will be recorded and filmed, and segments may be used in a documentary film of the same name (http://www.TheCycleLivingATaboo.com).

"Every year, more than two-thirds of patients undergoing advanced fertility treatments contend with failed cycles, which include I.V.F., donor eggs and surrogacy," said Irina Vodar, award-winning documentary filmmaker and co-producer of The Cycle. "Yet the vast majority of these outcomes, and the women and men affected by them, remain invisible in popular media, relegated instead to online communities or anonymous blog sites where any potential social impact and public education dissipates."

Vodar added, "For thirty-five years the $4 billion global reproductive technology industry has benefited from misleading coverage from mainstream media that suggests that technological advancements more often than not results in 'successful' endings that include delivery of a healthy baby. When treatments fail, you fall off the charts, you disappear, you don't exist."

Infertility has had a constant presence in civilization -- first revealed in ancient times -- yet the subject remains shrouded in myth and stigma. 2013 data from the U.S. National Institute of Health shows that nearly every sixth couple of childbearing age is affected by infertility -- 7.3 million people in the U.S. or 12 percent of women of childbearing age.[2] The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 60 to 80 million couples worldwide currently suffer from infertility.[3] The definition of what constitutes infertility varies across regions of the world[4] and is estimated to affect 8 to 12 per cent of couples worldwide.