Baylor Family Fertility Program at Texas
Children's Hospital
Experienced Specialists
Delivering Hope
Infertility
affects 1 out of every 6 couples in America. Baylor
Family Fertility Program at Texas Children's
Hospital offers personalized, compassionate care for
couples who want to become pregnant, and we help
women achieve healthy pregnancies with the most
effective, cost-efficient fertility solutions.
Drawing on more than 3 decades of expertise in
reproductive endocrinology, our fertility experts
continually translate current data-driven clinical
research into family-driven treatment.
Because we
are a top academic and research institution
partnered with a leader in pediatric medicine, we
do not turn away women with difficult fertility
issues.
Instead, our fertility specialists take a
personalized approach to treatment, creating care
plans that meet each couple’s individual needs and
concerns.
Assisted Reproductive
Technologies (ART)
The Baylor Family Fertility Program
at Texas Children's Hospital is led by world-renowned reproductive
endocrinologist and president of the
American
Society of Reproductive Medicine, Dr. William E. Gibbons.
The program offers a wide range of assisted
reproductive technologies (ART), including:
- In-vitro fertilization (IVF)
- Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI)
- Donor eggs
- Embryo cryopreservation
- Embryo donation
- Preimplanation genetic diagnosis (PGD)
- Ovarian, oocyte and embryo cryopreservation for cancer
patients
- Male infertility surgery and medical therapy
Male Infertility
Male infertility contributes to
about half of all infertility cases. We partner with
the prestigious Baylor College of Medicine
Scott
Department of Urology, a specialized laboratory
devoted exclusively to male reproductive health
testing, to offer expert care and evaluation, sperm
banking and reproductive analyses.
Schedule an Assessment
Call 713-798-7500 or visit
Baylor College
of Medicine OB/GYN to schedule an assessment with our fertility experts. No physician referrals are necessary, and prospective patients can be seen within 2 weeks of calling for an assessment.