 |
|
|
| 
Connections
Online
Sessions Schedule: August
August 3, 2005, Wednesday
Speaker: Just Us- Lisa Rosenthal, M.A., (Educational
Coordinator, The American Fertility Association)
Topic: Come Chat, Ask, Complain, Giggle and Share
Time: 8-9 PM, EST
August 11, 2005, Thursday
Speaker: Harlan Tenenbaum, Esq., Director of Adoption
House, Inc.
Topic: Adoption as a Real Option
Time: 8-9 PM, EST
August 16, 2005, Tuesday
Speaker: TBD
Topic: There’s More to Reproductive Medicine
than Just IVF
Time: 8-9 PM, EST
August 24, 2005, Wednesday
Speaker: TBD
Topic: Complimentary Alternative Treatments- What Really
Can Help
Time: 8-9 PM, EST
Click
here
for Connections Online
Connections
is made possible by an unrestricted educational grant
from Serono, Inc., providers of Fertility LifeLines™.
For more information, call 1-866-LETS-TRY or visit www.fertilitylifelines.com. |
In
this issue, you'll find:
Dear Friends,
Good news from Connecticut this month! Connecticut Governor
M. Jodi Rell signed into law a bill that requires insurance
coverage of many fertility treatments. This law offers infertile
couples, who have had insurance for at least a year, coverage
for a variety of procedures, such as induction of ovulation,
artificial insemination and in vitro fertilization (IVF),
which will help many Connecticut residents start families.
We hope
other states continue to follow suit, and also mandate
insurance coverage for fertility treatments. Another important
ART
issue receiving national attention, is ensuring that egg
donation continues to be an option for those who will rely
on donated eggs to build their family.
Egg donation has helped thousands of women achieve pregnancy
and deliver healthy children who would have otherwise never
realized that dream. The AFA is committed to keeping this
option available in the United States. Egg donation, however,
has received extensive negative publicity, mainly as a result
of what is considered high fees that fertility clinics pay
to some donors.
Since negative media attention has the potential to initiate
legislation in Congress that could effectively eliminate
gamete (egg and sperm) donation as an option for many needy
couples, The AFA and others have begun to contact independent
agencies providing oocyte donation matching services.
Banning of gamete donation has already occurred in a few
countries outside of the United States, like Italy in a parliamentary
vote in the spring of 2004. A referendum to overturn that
Italian law in 2005 was unsuccessful. Couples who seek donor
eggs in Italy now have to travel outside of their country
for assistance, increasing the financial cost and emotional
burden for many Italian couples with reproductive difficulties.
Thankfully, fertility patients in the U.S. do not have to
face this issue today and the AFA will continue to advocate
for egg donation to ensure we do not have to face this issue
in the future. We are pleased to share with you the Society
for Assisted Reproductive Technology (SART) list of egg
donation agencies who are SART members, and who agree to follow SART
guidelines for egg donation. We hope this list will be of
assistance to you should choose this option on your fertility
journey
Stay well,
Pamela

| Upcoming
Events and Support Services: |
| Fertility
Dream |
This
summer and early fall, you will have the opportunity
to join reproductive health patients, their families
and supporters at three different Fertility Dream races:

click here for more information
Chicago,
IL August 7, 2005
Danbury, CT September 11, 2005
Boston, MA September 18, 2005
Anyone
can take part in the Fertility Dream: fitness enthusiasts,
elite runners, and most importantly, those who’ve
never participated in a race before. A 5K (kilometer)
race is 3.1 miles, which can be a leisurely hour-long
walk or a fast-paced 18-minute run. The AFA will help
interested members find the pace that’s right
for them. But most of all, we want you to join us,
as a participant or sponsor, to help us raise awareness
for fertility in communities nationwide, and to say “We’re
serious about preserving health and getting fit!”
All
the information you need to get started is available
here, just clicks away. You can register to run, receive
a training program customized to your fitness level,
become a sponsor, make a donation, or tell friends
and family members. All profits from the Fertility
Dream will benefit The AFA’s patient education
outreach.
To
register or donate, visit www.TheAFA.org or call The
AFA at (888) 917-4777. 
|
| FREE
INTRODUCTORY TELECONFERENCE COACHING SESSION |
MOVING
FORWARD WITH YOUR LIFE AFTER PREGNANCY LOSS
Date/Time:
Tuesday August 9, 2005, 9:00 P.M. Eastern Standard
Time
The
purpose of this group is twofold: to share what your
loss means to you; and to learn the “how-to’s” of
moving forward with your life and your goals.
As
group size will be limited please contact us by Thursday,
August 4. One of the facilitators will be in touch
with you about the details. If you did not see this
message until after the 4th, you can try to see if
there is still space available or contact us about
future groups on this topic.
Group
facilitated by AFA therapists, Patricia Mendell,
LCSW,BCD and Izetta Siegal Stern, LCSW,BCD. Please
e-mail pmendell@aol.com and
copy ISiegalStern@aol.com or
phone Izetta at 212-691-1266 or Patricia at 2l2-819-1778.
|
|
|
This
month's featured article:
|
|
WHAT ’S
IN A WORD?
by Jacky Boivin, PhD
“Barren”, “sterile”, “infertile”,
are just some of the words we use to refer to men and women
who have reproductive difficulties. Does it matter which
one we use? What do these words mean to you? When I think “barren”,
I think of a dry unyielding landscape extending as far as
the eye can see, nothing growing, not now, not ever; “sterile” is
cold, harsh, unkind, it repels life rather than offers it
up; “infertile” is better, but the “in” makes
the word deeply painful. Many hear "not quite fertile." It
makes me think incompetent, incapable, incomplete. So words
do make a difference, but does it affect how people with
the problem behave.
Some words used
in reproductive health label people whereas others label
problems, and from a psychological perspective
that is an important distinction. If you are a “sterile
man” or “infertile woman” that is an all-encompassing
label, the adjective is applied to the whole of you, not
just your blocked tubes, hormones or wandering sperm. This
kind of label narrows your horizons, your possibilities,
your competence, and essentially asks that you take on another
identity, become someone new and worse someone less complete.
And herein lies the problem: many people who believe they
have reproductive difficulties are reluctant to take action
because they fear how that label might affect who they are,
how they think or feel about themselves and how others see
them.
Indeed, once you
have a label, you generally start to act in a way that
confirms that label, or what that label means
to you. If being a “sterile woman” makes you
feel incompetent, then you pay more attention to those aspects
of your behavior that confirm that label. In other words,
the label generalizes your feelings of incompetence from
your reproductive ability to all of your abilities, so that
you come to perceive yourself as incapable in a variety of
ways.
When you label people instead of problems you also affect
the way other people behave towards you. Because the label
is attached to you, people may start to make assumptions
about what you can or cannot do, even if the task at hand
has nothing to do with the particular problem. So you take
the label personally and so do people around you.
So if the label
makes a difference and it affects people, why not label
the problem rather than the person? Is a ‘sterile
man’ the same as a man with “reproductive difficulties”?
What does the word “difficulty” mean to you?
It makes me think – obstacle, hindrance, hassle, and
all of these make me want to solve the problem. “Difficulties” is
a familiar word, one we encounter all the time, at work,
in relationships, at the post office. We know what to do
when we have difficulties, we have possible ways of coping,
we have experience resolving them. “Difficulties” is
an action word, a get going sort of word, a call to action,
a challenge. More importantly, reproductive difficulties
as a label does not narrow who I am; in fact it adds to my
complexity as a person: I am + "reproductive difficulty".
Whether or not the difficulty is there, “I am” remains
intact.
It is because words matter that patient advocacy organizations
are committing themselves to labeling problems rather than
people and to raise awareness that reproductive difficulties
can be overcome. By changing the label, it will be easier
for people to start finding solutions to their reproductive
problems now.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|