Delhi centre brings joy to Army homes: 500 test tube babies on way
Related
Top Stories
- UPA II report card: Govt flaunts stricter rape law, remains silent on graft
- CSK team principal: Avid golfer, fast car lover, married to cricket
- British soldier hacked to death in suspected Islamist attack
- Top Lashkar militant Hilal Molvi killed in Kashmir encounter
- Sanjay Dutt's life at Yerwada begins as prisoner number 16656

Infertility in the armed forces, often blamed on the stresses of military life but rarely discussed in the past, is no longer a taboo topic.
With more and more families stepping forward, the assisted reproductive technology (ART) centre at the Army Hospital (Research and Referral) in New Delhi has recorded 500 test tube pregnancies this year.
Set up in 2003 as a fertility treatment centre for armed forces personnel and their spouses, the ART centre has brought joy, among others, to a couple who lost their two children to the 2004 tsunami, another who lost their only son in a road accident, a young cancer patient who had her eggs preserved before chemotherapy, and a soldier who had semen samples stored before treatment for testicular cancer.
Doctors say while an estimated 10 per cent of couples in the general population need medical assistance for conception and 20 per cent need counselling and minor procedures, the incidence is "much higher" in the armed forces.
Lt Col Sandeep Karunakaran, who heads the ART centre team, told The Sunday Express: "The incidence of infertility in the armed forces is definitely higher due to a variety of possible reasons. Separation of families due to postings across the country, general exposure to hostile environment, high altitude areas and stress could be some of the reasons."
At the ART centre, where Lt Col Karunakaran is assisted by gynaecologist Lt Col Nikita Naredi and embryologist Maj VDS Jamwal,
patient strength has "more than doubled" in the last five years.
"Acceptance of infertility as a medical problem and support from the Army has helped. We have been issuing medical certificates to those who come to us. This helps them get Delhi postings for at least a year till the IVF cycles are completed," Lt Col Karunakaran said.
... contd.
Editors’ Pick
- Paddy shortfall blamed for mystery death of procurement officer
- 'Bookie' Vindoo was close to BCCI chief's son-in-law: cops
- Net widens, police watching three more players, new set of bookies
- British soldier hacked to death in suspected Islamist attack
- Malegaon 2006 case: NIA names four right wing terror suspects
- BJP invokes 'sarcasm, ridicule' against PM
- Nine years on, Sonia, PM put up show of unity, Singh hints at unfinished business


30 yrs of marriage, few days to deportation to Pakistan
India pins hope on tactics that helped end past Chinese incursions
'Railway official was eyeing lucrative electrical post'
Pawan Bansal won't quit, Congress decides to weather new storm




















