Fertility Nurses Unfiltered

We Used to Do What?! Let’s Talk Past, Present & Future of Fertility Tech

1 h 12 min · 12 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio We Used to Do What?! Let’s Talk Past, Present & Future of Fertility Tech

Descripción

You've heard your doctor's perspective. You've heard your nurse's perspective. But what about the person who is literally holding your embryos in their hands? For most patients, the IVF lab is a black box. You hand over your eggs, your sperm, and your hope, and then you wait. What happens on the other side of that door is rarely explained, rarely demystified, and rarely talked about with the kind of honesty that actually helps people feel less alone in the process. That changes today. This week, Laura and Ashlee sit down with Dr. Joe, embryologist, lab director, and member of the leadership team at CCRM Fertility, who has spent nearly 40 years in the IVF lab. From his early days in London doing egg retrievals by laparoscopy in the middle of the night, to the cutting edge of AI-assisted embryo selection, Dr. Joe takes us on a full journey through the past, present, and future of reproductive science. And he does it in a way that is equal parts educational, eye-opening, and genuinely fun to listen to. In this episode, you'll learn about: * What IVF looked like in 1988 and why it would shock you by today's standards * The invention of ICSI and why it was one of the biggest revolutions in fertility history * How embryos are graded, what the numbers and letters actually mean, and why a BB embryo is not a bad embryo * Mosaic embryos, what they are, what they mean for your transfer, and why they exist in a gray area * Why even a genetically normal euploid embryo does not always result in a pregnancy * How AI is already being used in IVF labs and why it is being underutilized (the Betty Crocker cake mix analogy will make so much sense) * Sperm selection and why Dr. Joe thinks this is one of the areas where AI can make the biggest impact * The future of fertility science, including gametes from skin cells, non-invasive genetic testing, and where the ethical lines start to blur Dr. Joe reminds us that the embryology lab is full of scientists who are rooting for you at every single step. When a transfer doesn't work, they feel it too. When an embryo doesn't fertilize the way it should, they want answers just as badly as you do. Opening that black box a little wider is exactly the kind of conversation this podcast was built for. If you've ever stared at an embryo report and had no idea what you were looking at, if you've ever wondered what actually happens to your eggs after retrieval, or if you're just fascinated by where IVF is headed next, this one is for you.

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26 de may de 20261 h 5 min
episode One Woman's Mission: Inside the Jewish Fertility Foundation artwork

One Woman's Mission: Inside the Jewish Fertility Foundation

What would you do if you found out the treatment you needed to build your family could cost $20,000, $40,000, or even $200,000 out of pocket? For most people, that number is the end of the road. For Elana Frank, it was the beginning of something bigger. Elana is the founder and CEO of the Jewish Fertility Foundation, a nonprofit that has allocated over $3.25 million in fertility grants to more than 560 families, trained over a thousand community and healthcare leaders, and watched 377 babies come into the world as a result. But before any of that, she was a patient herself, navigating infertility in Israel, cycling through embryo after embryo, and fighting for a third child in a way that nearly cost her her marriage. In this episode, Elana pulls back the curtain on all of it. * What it was like to receive IVF for free in Israel and return to the U.S. to find almost no financial support * The conversation in a JCC baby pool that sparked the founding of JFF * A real breakdown of what fertility treatment costs, from IUI to IVF to donor eggs to surrogacy * Why fertility treatment is a medical necessity, not a luxury, and what needs to change in the insurance landscape * How JFF's grant program works, who it serves, and how to apply * The emotional toll infertility takes on relationships, and what it looks like when partners are not on the same page * What nurses and clinic staff can do right now to better connect patients with financial resources Laura and Ashlee bring their nursing perspective to this one in a big way, reflecting on what they wish they had known about financial resources when they were working in the clinic, and why proactive education from care teams can change the trajectory of a patient's journey. If you or someone you love is facing the financial and emotional weight of fertility treatment, this episode is for you. Connect with the Jewish Fertility Foundation: * Website: https://jewishfertilityfoundation.org/ * Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jewishfertilityfoundation/

19 de may de 202653 min
episode We Used to Do What?! Let’s Talk Past, Present & Future of Fertility Tech artwork

We Used to Do What?! Let’s Talk Past, Present & Future of Fertility Tech

You've heard your doctor's perspective. You've heard your nurse's perspective. But what about the person who is literally holding your embryos in their hands? For most patients, the IVF lab is a black box. You hand over your eggs, your sperm, and your hope, and then you wait. What happens on the other side of that door is rarely explained, rarely demystified, and rarely talked about with the kind of honesty that actually helps people feel less alone in the process. That changes today. This week, Laura and Ashlee sit down with Dr. Joe, embryologist, lab director, and member of the leadership team at CCRM Fertility, who has spent nearly 40 years in the IVF lab. From his early days in London doing egg retrievals by laparoscopy in the middle of the night, to the cutting edge of AI-assisted embryo selection, Dr. Joe takes us on a full journey through the past, present, and future of reproductive science. And he does it in a way that is equal parts educational, eye-opening, and genuinely fun to listen to. In this episode, you'll learn about: * What IVF looked like in 1988 and why it would shock you by today's standards * The invention of ICSI and why it was one of the biggest revolutions in fertility history * How embryos are graded, what the numbers and letters actually mean, and why a BB embryo is not a bad embryo * Mosaic embryos, what they are, what they mean for your transfer, and why they exist in a gray area * Why even a genetically normal euploid embryo does not always result in a pregnancy * How AI is already being used in IVF labs and why it is being underutilized (the Betty Crocker cake mix analogy will make so much sense) * Sperm selection and why Dr. Joe thinks this is one of the areas where AI can make the biggest impact * The future of fertility science, including gametes from skin cells, non-invasive genetic testing, and where the ethical lines start to blur Dr. Joe reminds us that the embryology lab is full of scientists who are rooting for you at every single step. When a transfer doesn't work, they feel it too. When an embryo doesn't fertilize the way it should, they want answers just as badly as you do. Opening that black box a little wider is exactly the kind of conversation this podcast was built for. If you've ever stared at an embryo report and had no idea what you were looking at, if you've ever wondered what actually happens to your eggs after retrieval, or if you're just fascinated by where IVF is headed next, this one is for you.

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episode From the Inside Out: A Unique Fertility Perspective artwork

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