Test tube babies and octomom: Development of in vitro fertilization
Infertility can be a major psychological stress in couples who desire to have children, and it affects approximately 3-10% of couples worldwide. However, in 1978 Robert Edwards helped pioneer a way to combat fertility issues through the development of in vitro fertilization (IVF). This technique involves the implantation of a human embryo fertilized outside of woman’s body into her uterus. The first “test tube baby,” Louise Brown, has since had a child of her own, and Robert Edwards received the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 2010. This misuse of technique has also created some controversy in recent years when Natalie Suleman (also known as “Octomom”) gave birth to octuplets in January 2009.
Use of IVF to allow those with Klinefelter's Syndrome to have children
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