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Catch Fertility, If You Can!

Parental instinct is inherent in all living beings. Being a social animal, man has a tendency to create and live in a family. But what is family without children? Absolutely incomplete. To put an end to this problem, world's leading fertility experts have predicted a fertile future for all, irrespective of the age.

Remember! the world’s first test tube baby, Louise Brown born thirty years ago, marking a turning point in the history of mankind. Since then about four million children came into the world with the aid of IVF technology.

The good news for childless couples/parents was announced by the scientists (conducting a research on infertility) in a special report in a science journal Nature.

In an extraordinary prediction scientists maintained that they will be able to treat the infertility in coming time, a treatment for an individual of any age, from one to 100.

According to scientists anyone who wants a child but have infertility problem or like will be able to have children in future.

Though scientists will take at least 30 years to put a full stop on an impasse called infertility but they have ensured they will reach the desired goal.

As per one of the report published in The Independent newspaper of Britain, in an effort to produce a healthy embryo unlike the normal pregnancy, the significant phenomenon of gestation of selected and genetically modified embryos might occur in an artificial womb.

Scientists in addition to finding out treatment for correcting infertility are also trying to find out effective cure for this incapacity to produce a child. A pending Bill, if passed will legalize these techniques, curving out a new way for more research and advances.

Low-cost IVF may be made accessible to the poor people in the developing countries at an economical cost of 50 pounds a cycle.

This may lead the concept of having cloned babies become a common thing for people around the globe, currently it is proscribed in many countries to put off ethical issues.

A medical breakthrough is awaited with bated breath by the scientists, but how effective it will be is not yet known and cannot be predicted with 100 per cent surety.

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