https://www.people.com/article/north-carolina-couple-lose-septupletsI'm curious to hear different perspectives on this. What do you think about the couple's choice to not lessen the number of fetuses?
It is heartbreaking that this happened to them but I can't help but think that this was unwise in the first place: I thought after octomom that fertility specialists were forbidden or at least very much recommended against doing practices that would create such high order multiples.
Re: News story about septuplets Loss mentioned
dx: Unexplained IF
TTC since May 2011, 1 year trying, and then 3 TI, 2 IUI = BFN
IVF #1 (May 2013): Antagonist Protocol:
24R, 18M, 15F w/ICSI; 5dt of 2 early blasts, no frosties = BFN
IVF #2 (August 2013): Lupron Stop Protocol:
28R, 23M, 15F w/ICSI; 5dt of 1 partially hatched blast, 7 frosties = BFP
EDD 5/23/14, blighted ovum (6w6d), D&C (8w6d)
FET #1 (April 2014): transferred 2 5d blasts = BFP
C.J. born 01/09/15
I am a Christian, but I get pretty uncomfortable with talk about "God's will" when it comes to infertility and pregnancy loss. I don't know. I've had two losses, and I just know that it's an incredibly sad thing, and my heart breaks for anyone else who has to go through it.
As far as the selective reduction- I'm not sure that I would be able to do this myself, but I don't know because I have never been on that situation. I would never judge them for their choice not to reduce, even if it increased their risks. I also wouldn't judge them if they had chosen TO reduce as these are all very personal decisions. I don't think it is ever fair to judge others for their choices when it comes to family planning. Period.
On that note, I find it hard to believe that the couple did IVF. They probably did IUI or ovulation drugs. They are harder to control the number of eggs that get released and it's harder to manage for multiples.
I do respect their decision not to reduce as I know that it would be a really hard choice to make and it's certainly not for everyone. My heart breaks for them.
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I want to emphasize I was not ever judging this couple's decision: I think it has to be one of the hardest things a couple could face.

<p align="center"I totally understand what you meant. I can't say what I would decide to do because I'm not in the situation and it's just so much bigger than a split second decision made hypothetically to me. I don't even feel comfortable, personally, trying to think about the choices!
Stories like this make me really, really angry - at the doctor! Women trust their Ob/gyns, and many of them simply hand out fertility drugs like candy. It gives fertility treatment in general a really bad reputation, and most women who went through treatment and spoke openly about it heard from at least someone, "Oh, don't do that! Aren't you afraid you'll end up like Octomom or Jon & Kate Gosslin?"
The truth is that the doctor should be doing monitoring. There should never be a question how many eggs are releasing. If there's too many, the couple should be advised to abstain. "Too many" depends on several factors, including the infertility diagnosis (for which the doctor would have had to have done proper testing, and many Ob/gyns skip this step and just hand out Clomid like candy on Halloween), the age of the patient, prior history with fertility & treatment cycles, etc. For me, our doctor would not have allowed us to proceed with more than 3 mature eggs.
It makes me really, really angry when doctors don't do this. It puts people in the impossible position of deciding on selective reduction, risks the health of Mom and babies, and is just all around a terrible idea.
Sometimes things happen - there's only 3 eggs but 2 of them spontaneously split into identical twins so there's 5 babies from 3 eggs (non-identical, or fraternal, twins are from two different eggs, which is most common with fertility treatment though it does happen sometimes when a woman releases more than one egg - identical twins are when one egg splits, and happens with the same chances for all women - about 1.5%). But with proper monitoring, the chances of this are SOOOO remote.
We had about a 25% chance of twins and a 5% chance of triplets. The chances for anything higher were less than 0.5%. That's a responsible doctor.
I don't blame the mother, but I want the doctors who create these situations to be banned from prescribing fertility meds going forward. They need to refer to someone who actually knows what they're doing.
Off birth control March 2012 - Actively trying Sept 2012-April 2014
BFP on May 5th after Follistim & IUI #3
I don't have a problem saying I would reduce. I would NEVER want to be in that situation and I don't judge anyone in the situation for making whatever is best for them. I would reduce to 3, as that's the most I would feel capable of carrying. As far as how to choose, it's my understanding that the doctor takes the closest to them.