A Complete Guide to Surrogacy
There are options available at Earthly
Angels if you want a biological child but are unable to bear pregnancy
for a variety of reasons. You and your husband will also have a biological
child with a genetic resemblance to at least one of you if you choose a
pregnant mother to bear your baby for you. Surrogacy is when a woman, known as
a surrogate mother, bears a baby for you and your husband because you are
unable to do so yourself — for example, because you are unable to support a
pregnancy, lack a uterus, or have a medical condition that makes pregnancy
risky or difficult. Earthly Angels Surrogacy
can be divided into two categories:
·
Gestational surrogacy is when a woman bears a
child that is not physically related to her. Your fetus, which was created in
vitro with your eggs or a donor's eggs and your partner's or a donor's semen,
is moved to the gestational carrier's uterus and develops until the baby is
ready to be born.
·
In
traditional surrogacy, the surrogate mother is either artificially inseminated
with sperm from the infertile couple's male counterpart or impregnated with the
surrogate's eggs via IVF. Traditional surrogates are recommended much less
often than gestational surrogates by Sharron Wooten and surrogacy
services seldom have them due to ethical and legal concerns. In reality,
conventional surrogacy is illegal in some states. Individual state laws
restrict surrogacy conception and births.
A surrogate mother may be used
for both people and couples. The below are few examples of people who may like
to use a surrogate:
Women who are unable to conceive
due to a lack of viable eggs and whose health would be jeopardized if they were
pregnant. Ones who may not have a uterus or who may have a uterine malfunction.
Lesbian couples are interested in mutual surrogacy, in which an embryo produced
from one mother's egg is inserted in the uterus of the other mother. The
surrogacy process at EarthlyAngelsConsulting.com begins after the preliminary
steps are completed. If you're using a gestational surrogate, you might be
prompted to have the surrogate take birth control pills to keep her period in
line with yours or the egg donors. She would then begin taking estrogen and
progesterone to prepare her uterus for conception. The surrogate's period will
be monitored with regular blood draws and ultrasounds to ensure that it is on
track and ready for embryo transfer. Once all of the surrogate's mechanisms are
in place, the embryo is inserted into her uterus, much as with an IVF cycle,
with the hopes of a stable pregnancy and a healthy infant. During pregnancy, a
surrogate mother can face the same medical risks as other expectant mothers.
Gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, eclampsia, and HELLP syndrome are only a
few of the health issues that may arise during pregnancy. Any medical treatment
decisions that occur during the pregnancy can be made only with the surrogate
mother's consent. When traditional surrogates are used, there are also legal
risks, especially when it comes to parental rights. Once your baby is born, you
and your wife will be the legal guardians, but you can contact a lawyer first
to make sure the rules of your state allow it.
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