I’m thrilled to join Whitney Hall on the Create a Happy Family podcast to share everything you need to know about taking control of your fertility journey before you even step into a doctor’s office. I loved this conversation with Whitney so much that I’m sharing with you on The Egg Whisperer Show, too!
As a fertility specialist with over 16 years of experience, I’ve seen too many people start their family-building journey without understanding their baseline fertility health, and I’m here to change that. In this conversation, I break down my TUSHY Method, a simple five-test framework that gives you clarity about your reproductive health, whether you’re 25 or 45, single or partnered, just starting to think about kids or already deep in treatment.
We dive into the real conversations I have with patients every day, from navigating age-related fertility challenges to understanding when egg freezing makes sense, and why egg donation isn’t something to fear but rather a beautiful path to parenthood. I share the questions you should be asking your doctor, the red flags you shouldn’t ignore, and why hope is actually your greatest asset on this journey. Whether you’re just curious about your fertility or actively trying to conceive, this episode will help you move from overwhelmed to empowered.
In this episode, we cover:
- The TUSHY Method: Five essential fertility tests everyone should know about (tubes, ultrasound, sperm, hormones, and genetic carrier screening)
- Why proactive fertility testing matters, even if you’re not ready to start trying yet
- Realistic expectations for egg quality, embryo banking, and success rates at different ages
- Egg freezing vs. embryo freezing: How to create a strategic plan based on your goals
- Breaking down egg donation myths and why my patients’ only regret is not doing it sooner
- How to advocate for yourself in fertility appointments by asking one simple question: “Why?”
- The red flags you should never ignore—from painful periods to relationship issues
Resources:
- Create a Happy Family website: createahappyfamily.com/thepodcast
- Egg Donor & Surrogate Solutions: createahappyfamily.com
- The Egg Whisperer Show podcast on Spotify and Apple Podcasts
- Dr. Aimee’s Supplement Stack information
Full Transcript:
Welcome to The Egg Whisperer Show. This episode originally aired on the Create a Happy Family podcast, which is hosted by Whitney Hall and produced by Egg Donor & Surrogate Solutions. We loved this conversation so much that we wanted to share it with you today. To learn more about Create a Happy Family and Whitney, head over to their website, CreateAHappyFamily.com/thepodcast. Let’s get onto the show…
Whitney Hall: In today’s episode, Dr. Aimee takes you from fear to understanding. She’ll walk you through the tests that matter, the myths that hold people back, and the simple steps that can give you clarity long before you take your next step in your fertility journey. If you’ve been searching for answers, if you’re ready for guidance you can trust, if you want to move forward feeling informed, supported, and truly ready, this episode is for you.
Just to start right off, I know in the space that we’re in, we see it all the time where people step into the fertility world just feeling so overwhelmed. Luckily, there are so many resources like The Egg Whisperer and our show, and just so many other things. People can go from confused and anxious to feeling a whole lot more informed and empowered. What do you wish everyone understood before they even start thinking about fertility treatment and go down the Doctor Google rabbit hole?
Dr. Aimee: I think what I want everyone to know is there are really simple tests that you can do just to get a basic understanding about your fertility. When it comes to other issues, like diabetes, hypertension, we get it, there are tests you can do and you can fix it. There’s just something about fertility, people just get into that car and make that cross-country trip without doing any tests, and they don’t check under the hood. Fertility is one of those things where you want to check under the hood, you want to make sure that the oil level is where you need it to be and that the gas is full.
I feel like that could potentially prevent miscarriages, prevent pregnancy complications, so I want people to get tested. I don’t want everyone to need a fertility doctor, but I think getting a nice fertility health check should be part of our proactive preventative medicine plan for everybody who is thinking about starting a family.
Whitney Hall: Yes, absolutely. What do you wish OBGYNs were saying at the beginning, or maybe being part of just a regular checkup?
Dr. Aimee: I think it’s hard for OBGYNs because a lot of them are employed by big hospital systems, they’re not in control of their schedules. They’re given a very short, limited time that they can spend with patients. I know that OBGYNs are very well-intentioned and they do their best, but oftentimes that’s not the best place for you to get your fertility information. I’ve seen that sometimes patients get diagnoses that aren’t accurate or they’re discouraged from trying, especially if you’re over 40. Doctors actually have their own biases, and they’ll share that with patients, and it makes them feel really bad. I think that’s why I came up with the TUSHY Method to make it easy for OBGYNs. Get the tubes checked, do an ultrasound, get the sperm checked, do some hormone tests, do a genetic carrier screen, and you’re done. But that is actually a lot of work for someone to do for a patient who gets 15 minutes per slot, and I think it’s overwhelming for OBGYNs who have to stay on schedule and see so many patients every single day.
There’s online platforms that people can go to and do-it-yourself tests from home that people can do. You can get your AMH checked from home, you can do a semen analysis from home, you can do a genetic carrier screen from home. I imagine one day, you’ll be able to do an ultrasound from home. There’s technology for that, it’s just not for the masses quite yet.
Whitney Hall: Let’s talk about the TUSHY Method. What does that mean as far as getting started on finding out more about your own fertility health?
Dr. Aimee: Exactly. The thing is, you don’t really know you’re fertile until you try. That’s true. But before you try, you might want to learn about yourself so that you’re not finding things out that you wish you had known when you were pregnant.
I’ll start with the Y. The Y is your genetic carrier screen results. Two people can happen to have fallen in love that carry a really serious disease that could be lethal to a baby. You don’t want to find that out when your baby is born. You don’t want to find that out when you’re pregnant. That’s so anxiety-provoking. There are proactive things that you can do if, let’s say, you and your husband both carry a gene for cystic fibrosis, you can do IVF and screen embryos for that. Wouldn’t you want to know that ahead of time? I think most people would say yes. I think there’s this misunderstanding that if you find out something is wrong, then you can’t have kids. That’s not the case. It might be a little bit more difficult to have a healthy family, but it doesn’t mean that you cannot.
As far as the hormone tests, again, these tests are not perfect, but they’re the closest thing we have to a semen analysis for women. That’s a simple test that you can do called the AMH test. It doesn’t tell us how good your eggs are, but it gives us a window into maybe how long you’re going to be able to try for how many mature eggs we could possibly get from an IVF cycle for you.
Sperm is 50% of an embryo, and we know that sperm quality does matter. I think it’s important, I spend just as much time talking to guys about their sperm health, supplements, lifestyle, things that they can do to improve sperm, just like I do for my female patients.
Your uterus is where a pregnancy grows, so we look at the walls of the uterus, we look for things like fibroids, we look for adenomyosis, which is inflammation of the walls that can cause miscarriage. We look at the ovaries, we look for cysts of endometriosis. All of these things are part of how we forecast what a fertility future will look like for a patient. I think if someone really wants to be proactive, be on top of their fertility health, I think that is important to do.
Then checking fallopian tubes, not necessarily required, but if you’re someone who has had chlamydia in the past, or if you’ve had a pelvic surgery, like a ruptured appendix that had to be removed, or if you have endometriosis, these are risk factors for having your fallopian tubes not function. The fallopian tube is where the meet-and-greet occurs between the egg and the sperm, and that’s where fertilization happens. The embryo travels down the fallopian tube, into the uterus and implants there.
I just did the TUSHY Method backwards, just to make it a little bit fun for people, but it’s the five tests that we can do that can get us to a diagnosis and explain things for patients. I see it all the time, patients say, “I have unexplained infertility.” I’m like, your husband’s motility is 10%, your AMH is 0.1, and you have one tube that’s blocked. How is that unexplained? It’s very rare that you can go through all of these tests and not tell patients what’s going on with them.
Whitney Hall: Absolutely. It’s great to have the information to where you are diagnosing before treating, versus a hope and a prayer, and then oh wait, things aren’t working, now let’s start figuring things out.
Dr. Aimee: Right. Especially as people are waiting longer to have families, you want to know these things ahead of time so that if you want to preserve your fertility through egg freezing or embryo freezing, you’re doing it before your eggs run out.
Whitney Hall: You’ve kind of already mentioned it, you are seeing patients that are waiting longer to have their families, patients that are older, in their 40s. How does age and all of those factors truly shape your conversation and those next steps when it comes to when that patient wants to start building their family?
Dr. Aimee: I never want to shame anyone or make them feel bad for coming to me at 48, ready to start their family. The reality is that age damages eggs. The older you are, the less viable your eggs are and the less likely it’s going to work. I like to have very hope-filled, practical conversations with people. I think a lot of times, patients are made to feel really bad, which is ridiculous. A 48-year-old man who wants to have a baby would never be told that he’s crazy, but unfortunately, that happens in fertility clinics everywhere that people just are asking for things that are just unrealistic. The reality is, most of the time, that they are.
I just educate very gently. I lay out what’s going to give you the highest chance of pregnancy, what the different treatment options are, and then people get to choose what feels right for them. I try to do my best to make my patients’ priorities mine, whether it’s trying for a retrieval at 50, I have done that, or doing ten IVF cycles for someone who just has one egg so that they can bank embryos for themselves, I’ve done that, too. I have all the energy in the world to help people on their path, depending on what’s important to them.
Whitney Hall: What are those realistic expectations when it does come to embryo quality, egg quality, and timeline as you are aging?
Dr. Aimee: Patients think that they can wait until they’re 40 to start their family because they have doctors like me that can help them, but the reality is that it can take six IVF cycles to have one healthy embryo, and you might still not have that. I tell patients to expect that most of the eggs may not be healthy and it might be too late, and that’s okay. At least we’re going to go through this experience and we’re going to feel like we gave it our all, but there are so many other ways of building a family that are great.
No one gets married or no one starts their fertility journey as a single person, or an independent person is what I like to call my single patients by choice, saying, “I can’t wait to see which egg donor I’m going to use.” No one says that. The reality is that egg donation, until in vitro gametogenesis is actually a thing, is a great way to grow your family. I bring those concepts up, just to plant the seed early, just so they know that it’s okay to actually move on to donor eggs if they need them when you’re over 40. Some patients need donor eggs even if they’re under 40.
Whitney Hall: I want to definitely circle back to the egg donation factor. I feel like egg freezing has really just gotten a big spotlight within the last few years, as far as becoming a lot more attainable. Insurance is covering it, things like that. There is still a lot of confusion around it. How do you help your patients and your listeners navigate whether egg freezing is the best next step for them?
Dr. Aimee: I think egg freezing is for everyone, whether you’re in your twenties, thirties, or even forties. I feel like it’s important to have someone sit down with you and tell you how many eggs you need to freeze for the number of children that you want. For example, if I have a 40-year-old, I’ll say let’s try to freeze 30 eggs for you, and I talk to them about making embryos as well. Thirty eggs could mean six or seven egg freezing cycles. Just like three or four eggs, you just don’t know until you fertilize them if you have a good one in there. The likelihood that each embryo is genetically normal at, let’s say 40, is about 25%. If they wait longer, at 44, it’s about 4%. Things change really rapidly between 40 and 44, versus 30 and 34.
I hope I will laugh at this conversation in the future and be like, “Remember when that was thing, when chances went down at 44, but there’s this thing you can do to the eggs that makes them more viable.” There is a lot of excitement around technology, like mitochondrial replacement therapy and, like I mentioned before, in vitro gametogenesis, but we’re looking at probably another five to ten years until these things could be potentially mainstream.
Whitney Hall: You mentioned earlier, as far as freezing eggs, and then freezing embryos. What are the pros and cons to either?
Dr. Aimee: Some patients are willing and open to being an independent mother, so I always say to a patient, if you are freezing eggs and you’re doing it because you’re not partnered right now, would you consider being an independent mother in the next five years? If the answer is yes, then maybe do a cycle of eggs and then also do a cycle of embryos, just so you understand what the potential is for your eggs based on what we learn through the IVF cycle. It’s a learning experience and, also, those embryos could actually help you become a mother if you don’t find the intended father at the time that you’re ready to be a mom.
A lot of people give up their desire for children because they’re waiting for the partner, but what we have to do is frame it that egg freezing isn’t about a man, it’s about preserving your fertility. If you find a man, great. If not, make those embryos and become an independent mom. I tell my patients that doing that sometimes opens your social circle and you meet the dad that was meant to be the dad to your kid just because you had that child.
Whitney Hall: Oh my gosh, I love that. You actually recently talked about creating a realistic egg freezing success plan. Can you dive into that a little bit?
Dr. Aimee: A realistic successful egg freezing plan is one that gives you an opportunity to have the number of children that you want. Sitting down with your doctor and talking to them about that is really important. I have a supplement stack that I recommend to patients, that they take for at least 30 days before they start egg freezing. There are other things that we do, we talk about lifestyle, body size, stress, acupuncture, red light therapy sometimes. Then, when you go through your egg freezing cycle, it isn’t just freeze and forget, it’s a freeze and let’s see what we learned. Learn from it and then see if we should do it again.
I have patients that freeze, and then a year later, they come back and do another cycle. Maybe two years later, they’ll come back and do another cycle. Then they get to the point where they’re ready to make embryos.
Whitney Hall: I love that. We kind of already talked about egg donation and how you bring it up with your patients, depending on the age that they’re coming to you and things like that. For some patients, egg donation is the direct path to growing their family. What are some of the misconceptions that you see when you start having those conversations with your patients when it comes to donor eggs?
Dr. Aimee: Men think that if they’re using a donor egg that they’re cheating on their wives. Think of it like an organ transplant. Once your organ isn’t working, you need someone else’s organ to continue to live. For women, they feel like they’re alive when they become a mother. I see that in my patients. If you’ve run out of eggs, you need an organ transplant, you need someone else’s egg to fulfill that goal for yourself so that you can continue to live on in the way that you want. Life is too short not to have that transplant and live the life that you want to live. That’s one misconception.
The other misconception is that when the baby comes out, you’re not going to bond with it, that you’re going to look at the baby and be like, “You’re not my baby.” That has never happened in my 16+ years of practice. I haven’t had a single patient say, “This is not my baby.” What I do have patients say is, “Wow, she/he resembles me,” and, “This is the baby that I was meant to have.” The only regret that my patients who have gone through egg donation have – well, there’s actually two. One is, “I wish I had done it sooner.” That’s the regret.
The other regret is, as times have changed, egg donation has become more open, so the one regret that they have is that they didn’t listen to me, because I always mention that I think it’s important to get to know your donor, if possible, meet them ahead of time, make them part of your family story. By knowing them, you can also find out more about their health history and if anything changes. Your children will be healthier donor-conceived people in the future as children and as adults if they know their story from the beginning. I’ve had patients that have come back and said, “I really wish I didn’t use an anonymous egg bank,” or they learn through a lot of the things that they’re hearing and reading on social media and talking to therapists about how anonymity is a thing of the past and it’s actually cool to get to know your donor. That’s one of the other regrets that people have.
Whitney Hall: One hundred percent. Our agency has a known and an unidentified program. That known program does give you the ability to, at minimum, have access to health history. That alone is just so important whenever you’re raising your kiddo. Then having the ability to get to know that person is so helpful. Talking to donor-conceived people as they’ve gotten older and are figuring out who they are, anyone that I’ve talked to, they’re like, “I’m not talking to this person as if you’re my mom and not this person,” it’s just, “That’s so cool, you like art and I do, too,” or little things like that. It’s just a part of their story.
Dr. Aimee: Definitely.
Whitney Hall: What are some of the things that whenever you are counseling your patients, when they’re choosing a donor, what are some factors that you feel as though they should prioritize, whether it’s medically or emotionally?
Dr. Aimee: I want them to find some sort of connection with the donor, whether it’s a hobby, or where they went to school, or what they do for work. I tell them not to focus so much on the physical characteristics. You’re not going to find someone that looks exactly like you, most of the time. Sometimes we do, but not most of the time. I think health history is important. Mental health history is important. Family history is important. Things like the donor’s mother’s shoe size is not important.
Whitney Hall: That’s a super great example. As someone is starting their fertility journey, or maybe they’re in the midst of it, and they’re continuing to feel overwhelmed, what are some practical steps that someone can make to make sure that they’re being heard when they go to those appointments?
Dr. Aimee: You just use the word why. You just say, “Why?” Just ask why. Why are you recommending this? Why this drug? You don’t have to remember any other word but why, it’s really as simple as that.
I had this experience with someone not that long ago. Every sentence, and I do talk a lot, everything that I do, I explain it a lot, like this is the medication and these are the side effects. She kept saying, “Why?” I thought it was lovely, it was very endearing. I said, “I really appreciate that you are saying why every time I end a sentence, because I feel like this experience is going to help me teach other patients how to be advocates for themselves if they don’t understand what’s being shared with them. Rather than smiling and nodding, and then walking away fully confused, you just say, “Why are you recommending that?” Why did you just say that? Why this protocol? Why this next appointment? Why this blood draw? That’s really all you need to say.
Then you have to own your own health history. When you go into these clinics, assume they don’t know who you are, assume they don’t remember anything about your history. What you have to do is show yourself love, so you have to show that you care about yourself. Every time you go in, I tell patients that are not my patients – you don’t need to do that with me – when you make an appointment with the doctor, always share your history. Just be like, “I know you’re so busy, but I just want to remind you that I’m 35 years old. I’ve been through three IVF cycles. My first cycle had one euploid, my second cycle had none, my third cycle I had one. I have one euploid left after I did one transfer that didn’t work. These are the tests that I’ve had done.” Just have a running paragraph about yourself.
You can send that at the base of every email with your full name, because sometimes when patients email the doctor, some clinics use a portal and some use email, your name is different than what your name is in the system, so it’s hard for people to make connections. I think it’s important to have that running summary for yourself so that when you go to the clinic, you can have printed out notes to share with your doctor just real quick, “I know you have so many patients, so this is my story.” I’ve had so many patients share with me, and you would think with technology that we would be getting better about this, where they’re like, “The doctor was actually looking at someone else’s chart and told me that I had something that I didn’t.” I’m like, what, how does that even happen? She said, “Then the doctor said, “Oh, sorry. I was actually looking at someone else’s chart.”
You just have to show yourself the love that you might not be getting, assume they don’t know who you are, so you have to make sure that they do. Saying that they don’t know what you’ve been through, a lot of times, they just don’t remember. These people are caring people. You just have to help them out more now than we did need to, let’s say seven or eight years ago. The culture of medicine has changed, how we take care of people has changed. In the old days, we used to say don’t Google it. Now, things have changed so much, it’s like why are you even asking me, go to ChatGPT.
Whitney Hall: I love that. I think there is this general sense of you walking in, and it’s not that they don’t care about you, it’s just there has been an explosion of patients. There’s this idea of if they don’t remember me, then they don’t care about me, and if they don’t care about me, then are they really giving me the care that I need.
Dr. Aimee: Right. You have to do it for them, you have to almost think of yourself as you’re their assistant, literally. I have patients that are like, “You probably have my records from all of the cycles that I’ve done.” I’m like, how would I have those records? Before I even see a patient, I have a whole checklist of things that I need, and I acquire them before I even meet with people. I want things to be carefully reviewed so that I can provide the best opinion for them and guide them in the best possible way. But other clinics aren’t going to do that, so you have to do that for yourself if they’re not doing it, if you’re going for another opinion.
Whitney Hall: That’s so great and such fantastic practical advice. Is there any go-to kind of questions that you feel like anybody should bring to a first consult?
Dr. Aimee: What’s my diagnosis? What’s my prognosis? What are the different treatment options? What would you do if you were me? That’s it.
Whitney Hall: Done and done, I love it.
Dr. Aimee: That’s all you need to ask, and you’ll walk away with all the information you need so that you can sit down with your fertility psychologist, or your mom, or your partner if you’re partnered, and come up with a great plan and a timeline.
Whitney Hall: Is there any time throughout someone’s experience where you feel like there is a go-to or I would seek a second opinion for that?
Dr. Aimee: For me, it’s not about second opinions based on what I’m recommending. It’s experts to help support my patient on her journey. It would be like an endometriosis expert because I’m not going to do your laparoscopy for you, I’m not an expert excision surgeon. Unfortunately, a lot of patients waste time getting surgeries done by people who are not minimally invasive gynecologic surgeons. Reproductive immunologists; I’m not an expert immunologist, I’m not going to waste a patient’s time doing that, so I’m going to have them get another opinion. Fertility genetic counseling; I’m an IVF doctor, I’m not a geneticist, and I want patients to get the most accurate information about their embryos and what the abnormalities are. Get another opinion from someone else, don’t just get the information from me. I want them to talk to someone else about that.
Whitney Hall: What do you find patients are most surprised about whenever they sit down with you? Whether it’s as they’re going through the TUSHY Method or they are having that first consult, what are some things that patients seem to be most surprised about?
Dr. Aimee: That they’re finally hopeful again. That they’re not as scared anymore. That they feel less overwhelmed. They feel like they understand the things that you asked me, what are the things that a patient should ask, I actually tell them those things during the course of my call. I always start with, what are your goals, what are your priorities, what treatment do you want to do next, what do you think the diagnosis is. Then I go through what I think it is, what we’re going to do about each of them, and then I lay out a plan and share with them what the pregnancy rates are for each of the different types of treatment options. Then we talk about next steps.
Whitney Hall: Perfect. Are there any red flags that you just feel like no one should ignore?
Dr. Aimee: Yes. No one should ignore severe pain with periods, heavy periods. That’s endometriosis. No one should ignore absence or super irregular periods. That could be early menopause or PCOS. No one should ignore testicular pain, groin pain for a guy. That could be a sign of testicular cancer. No one should ignore relationship issues. If your partner is not showing up for you, they’re not going to show up for you in pregnancy, and they’re sure as heck not going to show up for you when you’re a parent. I don’t think any woman has a baby to give it to a man 50% of the time. Fact. I think no one should ignore depression, anxiety, PTSD, and trauma. I feel like those issues should be addressed before you start treatment.
Whitney Hall: One hundred percent. It really is just a full human experience.
Dr. Aimee: It really is.
Whitney Hall: The fertility world has evolved. What are some of the biggest that you would hope that people would unlearn?
Dr. Aimee: That just because you have regular periods means that you’re fertile. Just because you look good on the outside and you look amazing and super young that your ovaries look the same way. That it’s just a woman’s problem, because it isn’t. I wish people would unlearn things like abortions cause infertility, because they don’t. Same thing about birth control pills. Birth control pills mask infertility, they don’t cause infertility at all. Those are just some of the big ones.
Whitney Hall: For listeners, for them to walk away feeling empowered, with all of this amazing information that you’ve given us, what message do you hope that they remember?
Dr. Aimee: I think I want them to remember that hope never killed anybody. No one dies from hope. It doesn’t hurt and it’s okay. I think a lot of patients are so afraid to get excited or be hopeful, because they’re worried that somehow they’re going to get disappointed. Life is too short to just live in fear all the time, in constant panic and worry. It’s okay to live a year feeling hopeful that you might get pregnant naturally, there’s nothing wrong with that. That’s just something that I share with my patients.
Whitney Hall: Absolutely. What gives you hope about the future of fertility and fertility medicine?
Dr. Aimee: What gives me hope is that people actually keep coming in, wanting to have babies. If you look at the news today, you’d think people would be like, “Nope, I’m good. No more babies. Look at this world, it’s insane.” But people still want to bring love into this world. There are lots of loving people out there. That just brings me lots of hope. It’s fun to get to do what I do. And I get to meet these babies. People come and meet me with their babies, I meet them at the park, they come over to my house. It’s just really amazing to be part of the community that I live in and then to have these special relationships with the families that I’ve helped over the years. I have babies now that are in college.
Whitney Hall: It’s amazing. It’s so fun to see that full circle.
Dr. Aimee: Yes.
Whitney Hall: Dr. Aimee, I have one last question for you. Truly, all of this has been such a wealth of information. Thank you so much. My last question for you, you have seen me over here just drinking my cup of coffee, and for anyone who knows me, they know that coffee and I are never far from each other. I always love to ask the question, what has filled your cup today? Literally or figuratively, what has been the thing to fill your cup?
Dr. Aimee: What has filled my cup is I got the most beautiful bouquet of flowers from a patient, and she sent them to me internationally because she was an international patient that came to me, because she just graduated the first trimester. They’re so beautiful. It was such a surprise. I obviously wasn’t expecting to get flowers from her. That was really touching and moving because we worked really hard together to help her reach this milestone. That was quite wonderful and lovely.
Whitney Hall: What a great way to celebrate that milestone. That’s beautiful. Congratulations.
Dr. Aimee: Thank you.
Whitney Hall: It really does feel so good to just see those families when they are starting with you. They’ve already had such a journey before they even get to us, no matter where they are. Then to see those beautiful full circle moments, it’s the best. It’s Christmas card season, I love getting those. It’s those baby pictures. Oh, it’s the best.
Dr. Aimee: It is the best. There’s nothing better, truly.
Whitney Hall: Dr. Aimee, again, thank you so much for just all you do for your patients, all you do for those who listen to you on The Egg Whisperer. We are just so grateful for your time.
Dr. Aimee: Thank you for having me join you today. It was so much fun talking to you.
Whitney Hall: It takes more than love to create a family. It takes compassion, courage, and connection. At Egg Donor & Surrogate Solutions, we’ve spent more than 18 years helping hopeful parents, surrogates, and egg donors create happy families through egg donation and surrogacy, one relationship at a time. Our team has been there. Many of us are former surrogates, egg donors, and intended parents, so we truly understand this journey. If you’re ready to take the next step, visit CreateAHappyFamily.com to apply today.



