The questions you ask in the first few meetings with a fertility clinic can help you decide whether you feel comfortable to proceed – or not.
Emma the Embryologist explains the essential questions to ask in an IVF consultation.
The questions you ask in the first few meetings with a fertility clinic can help you decide whether you feel comfortable to proceed – or not. Emma Whitney, The Evewell Head of Embryology and Genetics (aka @emmatheembryologist on Instagram) has written a blog on the essential questions to ask during your IVF consultation, so you get all the information you need before committing to treatment.
This article also features on Emma’s new website, which can be found here.
“I’ve done a lot of podcasts, webinars and Instagram Lives recently, and the one common theme is that patients don’t know what to ask in their first consultation with a doctor.
The questions you ask in the first few meetings with a fertility clinic can help you decide whether you feel comfortable to proceed with the information you have been given. You’re going to spend a long time in this clinic, so it’s important you feel supported and informed.
So here is my list of honest, unfiltered questions that, not only do you need to know the answer to, but a list of questions that you should be free to ask and should receive reasonable and honest answers to allow you to feel informed.
This is the most important starting question.
Can the clinic support your medical context? I.e. do they offer the right level of anaesthetic support or certain embryo genetic testing? Some clinics won’t treat you if your BMI is above a certain level, or your AMH is below a certain number…. or if your egg collection numbers look low. It affects their success rates too much! A hard truth.
Clinics choose which success rates to publish. Some publish their success rates on pregnancy rates and some on live births per embryo transferred.
But before we go on, we need to clarify something.
These two success rates can’t be compared apples to apples, therefore you can’t compare clinics if they report differently.
Pregnancy rates and babies born are both important measures of success, however, the chances of creating embryos to be transferred is more important, as without this you don’t fall into the published statistics.
A good question to ask is:
* Be mindful of clinics that cherrypick the results they choose to show you. Remember you went there for a baby, not a pregnancy. They are not the same thing!
There are many potential medical complications that come with multiple pregnancies, for both mother and babies.
Multiple pregnancies are dangerous for both the mother and babies, as well as put a strain on the NHS when babies are born prematurely. The risks are 10x compared to a singleton pregnancy.
Before your consultation, look at the clinic’s multiple birth rate. A multiple birth rate above 4% is worrying. Rates above 8% raise big red flags!
Good questions to ask are:
Your treatment should not be affected by the work patterns of the clinic staff. The human body does not have an in-built calendar and embryos do not know it’s the weekend or a bank holiday.
If you are told you can’t have a blastocyst stage transfer at the clinic because it falls on a Sunday then the clinic shouldn’t be offering blastocyst culture, at all.
Equally, if you go to a clinic for a particular treatment e.g. PGT-A, this plan can’t be changed because the biopsy falls on the weekend — that’s not your fault.
The embryology team play a huge part in the success of your treatment — you should be able to know more about them.
Unique to The Evewell, every single patient gets an embryology consultation before they start treatment, allowing them to have time to ask all these questions and fully understand each different stage.
This has to be outlined from the beginning. Everything you are going to need to pay for should be shown to you, before you start treatment. There shouldn’t be any nasty surprises (IVF is stressful enough!)
This includes if you need to have a “freeze all” embryo collection cycle, and a follow-up frozen transfer, typically not included in an IVF cycle.
If this is something you’ve been gearing up for some time, you need to understand the timelines of IVF, how it fits into your life and how you can juggle work and life around your treatment.
We’ve written a blog about How to Prepare for IVF and IVF, Step by Step to help prepare our patients.
Before you start treatment, you want to do whatever you can to give yourself the best possible chance of success. And I mean both immediately, and in the long term.
Some questions to ask in this situation are:
A semen analysis isn’t always enough. Has there been recurrent miscarriage? Has this been checked appropriately?
Depending on your age, if you want more than one child, you may want to consider banking embryos before your first embryo transfer, so you don’t come back in a few years and have to start the whole process again.
This is what I refer to as ‘family planning’.
Ask:
You may be just thinking “I’m desperate to just get pregnant and have a baby”, but I can’t tell you the amount of times I’ve had women and couples come back to me, this time in their early 40s, desperate for a second baby and by that time, it’s so much harder for them to secure a sibling for their child.
Not all clinics are created equally. Think about what is important to you when going through treatment.
The process of IVF treatment should be a collaborative effort between the patient, the consultant, the embryology team and other lifestyle and holistic considerations.
Basically: there are things you can do to help improve the outcome, and better still: feel more in control.
Recommended questions to ask your consultant, before starting IVF, are:
It shouldn’t all be go go go, sometimes you need to pause, take a moment and think about what you can do to help give yourself the best possible chance of success.
The take-home message here is never do anything that makes you feel unheard, without seeking a second opinion. Just because one clinic can’t or won’t offer you treatment with your own eggs and sperm does not universally mean that you have to move to a donor option. If that’s not what you want to do, seek advice.
If you’re already on your IVF journey, or you’ve completed your family, please share with people about to start IVF, or returning for more treatment; we’re stronger together and all of our experiences will help each other become better informed and less anxious.”