Is The Baby-Making Business Selling False Hopes?

Report this content

Former Patients, Women’s Health Advocates and Medical Professionals
Kick-Off National Initiative to Reveal Hidden Side of
High Fertility Treatment Failure Rates—77 Percent Globally in 2012

New York, NY – September 10, 2013 – Infertility patients, women’s health advocates and medical professionals are launching a national initiative to draw long over-due attention to the rarely reported enduring traumas, societal impacts, health risks and myths associated with infertility, childlessness and assisted reproductive technology (ART) treatments––including annual global failure rates as high as 77 percent in 2012 (1).

Open to the general public, the kick-off event, The Cycle: Living A Taboo, will be held on Friday, September 27, 2013 at 8:00 p.m. at the BMCC Tribeca Performing Arts Center Theater #2 in Lower Manhattan. The 90-minute program will feature insights from experts, as well as dramatic readings, film segments, and intentional conversations about stigma, hype vs. hope, and trading losses in for life. Tickets are available ($30 general admission through September 20; $40 thereafter). To secure a seat, visit: http://www.smarttix.com/show.aspx?showcode=CYC3.


“Exaggerated headlines and confusing, sometimes conflicting data from fertility clinics contribute to a distorted reality about what’s actually possible with still fragile and often experimental ART procedures. This has contributed to the myth that fertility medicine equals ‘successful’ science,” said Pamela Mahoney Tsigdinos, event co-producer and author of Silent Sorority, the first book to document living childless after failed treatments.

Irina Vodar, an award-winning documentary filmmaker and the event’s co-producer, added, “The best way to counter this imbalanced, one-sided story is for former fertility patients to speak out about their own experiences, particularly those whose treatments failed.”

Health and human rights organizations endorsing the event include Our Bodies Ourselves; the Center for Responsible Genetics; the Center for Reproductive Psychology; the Seleni Institute; Voice Male Magazine; Gateway Women; We Are Egg Donors, and The Halli Casser-Jayne Show: Talk Radio for Fine Minds. Featured speakers include:

Miriam Zoll, author of the new memoir-expose, Cracked Open: Liberty, Fertility and the Pursuit of High-Tech Babies. Zoll is a member of the board of the global women’s health and human rights organization, Our Bodies Ourselves, and the founding co-producer of the Ms. Foundation for Women’s original “Take Our Daughters To Work Day.”

Dr. David Barad, director of clinical ART and senior scientist at the Center for Human Reproduction in New York City. Dr. Barad recently participated in a national research effort that revealed some I.V.F. clinics manipulate federally mandated public reporting of I.V.F. outcomes to gain economic advantage.

Irina Vodar, co-producer of The Cycle and the producer-director of the upcoming autobiographical documentary of her own experiences with assisted reproductive technologies, The Cycle: Living A Taboo. Originally from Moscow, her well-received first full-length documentary, Miss GULAG, showcased at 36 international film festivals (including Silverdocs) and earned recognition from the Ford Foundation, Sundance Institute and the 57th Berlin Film Festival.

Jennifer Wolff Perrine, an award-winning investigative health journalist who has covered reproductive health and the fertility industry for nearly two decades. Her milestone article, “Breaking the Silence on Infertility” examined the stigma and secrecy surrounding infertility, and in 2011 won RESOLVE's Hope Award for achievement. Wolff Perrine has also won Planned Parenthood's MAGGIE Award for “When there is no good choice,” her expose on second term abortion, and first place for magazine feature writing from the Association of Health Care Journalists for “The Truth about Donor 1084,” a critique on the selling of genetically defective sperm made widely available by the nation's most trusted sperm banks. Wolff Perrine is also a former fertility patient.

Dr. Marni Rosner, the first scholar to research the long-term emotional, social, and cultural implications for women living without children after pursuing treatment for infertility. Dr. Rosner is the current editor of the University of Pennsylvania’s Doctorate of Social Work Newsletter, The Clinician, and is the recipient of the University’s 2012 Dr. Ram Cnaan award.

Pamela Mahoney Tsigdinos, co-producer of The Cycle, was first profiled in a landmark article by The New York Times called “Voices of Infertility.” She went on to write Silent Sorority, the first memoir to document fertility treatments not written by a mother. It received the Hope Award for Best Book in 2010 by RESOLVE, the National Infertility Association. Tsigdinos is an internationally recognized blogger who explores the stigma associated with infertility and living involuntarily childless.

Tracey Cleantis, is a writer, speaker and practicing psychotherapist. Her critically acclaimed blog, La Belette Rouge, and her new book, The Other Side of Impossible: How to Let Go of the Life You Planned and Find a Happy Ending, address themes of “finding depth in the ordinary” and “surviving and thriving while being childless.”

Sonia A. M. Daly is an author and voiceover artist and producer of Voices of Zen: Guided Meditation for Women Who’ve Miscarried. Collaborating with two-time Emmy® award-winner composer, Michael Whalen, she launched this inaugural guided meditation series that addresses unheralded topics of emotional disease based on her experiences with multiple miscarriages.

ptsigdinos@yahoo.com
Phone: 408-674-6997

About The Cycle: Living A Taboo
The Cycle: Living A Taboo (#TheCycleLivingATaboo) is the first independent, patient-led event focused on the hidden ramifications of infertility, including the often debilitating and underreported outcomes of invasive assisted reproductive technologies, as well as childlessness on individuals and society. The September 27, 2013 event will be recorded and filmed, and some footage may be used for a documentary film by the same name.  The Cycle is fiscally sponsored by Women Make Movies (WMM), a 501(c)3 non-profit organization. To make tax deductible contributions visit, http://www.firstgiving.com/fundraiser/thecyclelivingataboo/WMM
To secure a seat, visit: http://www.smarttix.com/show.aspx?showcode=CYC3.
To learn more about the Forum and the documentary, please go to The Cycle: Living A Taboo http://www.thecyclelivingataboo.com

Tags:

Quick facts

A University of Pennsylvania study on how infertility impacts female identity found that on average it took three to four years for study participants to fully emerge from feeling like infertility was their primary identity.
Tweet this
One study of 200 couples seen consecutively at a fertility clinic found that half of the women and 15% of the men said that infertility was the most upsetting experience of their lives. -- Harvard Mental Health Letter, The Psychological Impact of Infertility and its Treatment
Tweet this

Quotes

Exaggerated headlines and confusing, sometimes conflicting data from fertility clinics contribute to a distorted reality about what’s actually possible with still fragile and often experimental ART procedures. This has contributed to the myth that fertility medicine equals ‘successful’ science.
Pamela Mahoney Tsigdinos
The best way to counter the imbalanced, one-sided story is for former fertility patients to speak out about their own experiences, particularly those whose treatments failed
Irina Vodar