Infertility Online Discussion Group
I met a firebrand New Yorker at last year’s ENDOW Conference in Denver. Joan is the co-foundress of the John Paul II Center for Women in Manhattan. [It's now called Gianna Care with St. Peter's Hospital.] The John Paul II Center,
is an organization dedicated to advocating a deep understanding of the dignity of women, the meaning of human sexuality, and the nature of human relationships as expressed in the teachings of the Catholic Church. As part of this mission, it is committed to promoting natural family planning, pro-life reproductive health care, and pro-life medical ethics.
They recently reported on their blog [no longer in use--contact the Gianna Center for more info] their starting an online Infertility Discussion Group:
Finally, we have also started an outreach for pro-life and Catholic women struggling with infertility. This is an email listserv (a “Google Group”) called “Prolife Catholic Infertility.”
We created this in response to requests from Catholic and pro-life women from around the country for a common place to discuss those issues which pro-life women uniquely struggle with as they seek treatment for infertility.
What treatments are available? Which destroy embryos? What does the Catholic Church say about the various alternatives? Where can I turn for help?
Few have been the resources available to you – and many of you have expressed a sense of feeling abandoned by medicine if you do not want to go through with IVF or other artificial reproductive technologies.
At the JPII Center, we hope to eventually create an online resource where you can go to find answers to the common questions about infertility treatment, pro-life alternatives, ethical decision-making, and where you can go for help and support.
This will take some time. In the meantime, we have created this online email discussion group to allow you to network and dialogue with each other about the issues you are dealing with – many of you have already sought and found answers to these common questions and this group allows you to share these answers with others. It is a “closed” group, so only those people I add to the list will have access to the discussions in order to create a “safe space” for you to share your real concerns and questions.We are a Catholic organization, but any woman struggling with infertility who is looking for pro-life alternatives in infertility treatment is welcome to join, regardless of her faith tradition or beliefs.To be added to the list, please email me directly at amielnik@jpiicenterforwomen.org. I need only your name and email address and a brief description of why you are interested in the listserv.
I’m so glad they’ve jumped on the new media/ online discussion train. While one always needs to be prudent about online memberships and discussions, they can also be of enormous help, as it seems with the NFP Facebook group, which is quite active. It’s commonplace for women to travel from Europe, Australia and all over the North America to travel to Omaha just to get their NaProTechnology consultation and treatment, so until we can have NaPro consultants in every parish and surgeons in every metropolitan area, online discussion forums must serve as a place for research and connection.
I only pray that more and more people will train as FertilityCare practitioners, medical consultants and especially as NaProTechnology surgeons. Could you be called to teach NFP or be an NFP-only health professional? Consider it, for the need is great.
Pray for the JP II Center for Women and their mission!
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Hey, ok, I get it, I guess – but does this really work?
It depends on what you mean by “work.” If you mean it effectively helps to postpone pregnancy the answer is yes, when used correctly (the same as anything else). It also “works” to help identify, diagnose and treat women’s wellness issues. The challenge is, of course, finding NFP professionals and physicians to help you, but there are definitely options out there. NFP also “works” to build communication, decrease objectification of women, bond marriages and increase the romance, too.
The number of NaProTechnology surgeons in the US is increasing! (albeit slowly…) Besides the two in Omaha, they are found in St. Louis and Camp Hill, PA. And one or two more should have just finished their training this summer, but I don’t know where they will practice.
If you want to look at some statistics on the success of NaProTechnology, google this title: “Outcomes From Treatment of Infertility With Natural Procreative Technology in an Irish General Practice.” The article is available free online. Dr. Boyle is a general practitioner from Ireland who has had great success with treating infertility without surgery. The results of the study are pretty amazing, especially since it’s all non-surgical treatments. So when you take into account the additional successes that occur because of surgical treatment, it makes you wonder why more people wouldn’t want to go the NaPro route.
)
Thanks for the tips on surgeons and docs, Christine. I hope things are going well in Milwaukee still…
Update…I found out where the two latest physicians to be trained in surgical Napro are located: New York City and Fallbrook, California.
Thanks, Christine!