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Life and Death: Fertility on a Shoestring

Infertility is stigmatised in many countries. Claudia Hammond explores the programmes offering infertility treatment at a fraction of the cost. Originally broadcast 25 June, 2014

Claudia Hammond exposes a hidden problem which occurs before life has even begun. Nosiphiwo was ostracised by her husband鈥檚 family in South Africa after years of trying, in vain, for a baby. Stories like Nosiphiwo鈥檚, of social stigma and even physical abuse and destitution, are common in low-income countries, where most of the millions of infertile women in the world reside. While programmes tackle the causes of infertility, such as preventing and treating sexually transmitted infections, calls to provide affordable fertility services have been overlooked by agencies which tend to focus on the problem of over population.

Claudia visits Tygerberg Hospital in Cape Town where infertility treatment is being offered at a fraction of the cost of private clinics. Programme Director, Dr Matsaseng, is pioneering differing ways to keep costs down, from using cheaper medications in smaller amounts, to taking on the jobs of several staff himself, texting and supporting patients through each stage of their cycle to co-ordinate their treatments.

The next step is to find a way to take low-cost infertility treatment to rural areas. But this requires a laboratory. The Walking Egg Project, a shoe-box sized portable laboratory for performing IVF, could provide the answer. By the start of 2014, sixteen babies had been born using the system and the team in South Africa now hope to trial it at the hospital.

Available now

29 minutes

Last on

Sun 29 Jun 2014 04:32GMT

Broadcasts

  • Wed 25 Jun 2014 18:32GMT
  • Thu 26 Jun 2014 01:32GMT
  • Thu 26 Jun 2014 08:32GMT
  • Thu 26 Jun 2014 15:32GMT
  • Sun 29 Jun 2014 04:32GMT

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