Well, that was some interesting research.
Jul. 7th, 2003 04:25 pmFor some reason I'm continuing to think about the childlessness/sterilization thing, and ended up calling the Essure information line out of sheer curiosity. The woman I talked to was super nice and told me the names/numbers of two doctors who do the Essure procedure and are convenient to my part of the Boston area... no, let me rephrase that, they're a four-minute bus ride from where I'm sitting right now. Dear God, I love living in this area. A brand-new procedure and I can choose from a decent-sized handful of doctors, all available by public transit. :)
I went on to ask, far more nervously, about whether I was likely to have trouble convincing a physician to do the procedure on me, and she really wasn't able to say much because it varies by doctor, and that they try to avoid post-sterilization regret, which is more common when a woman has not had a child or children before the procedure. I said I understood. She asked my age and whether I had children, and so I had to do my "I have a biological child that I made with infertile friends of mine, and it's all open, and I've met her blah blah blah, and we're doing one more so she can have a sibling and then I'll feel like I've done my bit for the species" talk with an "um, I understand that open egg donorship is statistically unusual and I sure hope the doctors understand" ending tacked on. She said she enjoyed hearing that--I bet she gets to hear a hell of a lot of great stories with a job like hers. It still isn't clear how much trouble I'll really have, but I'm hoping that if I go in armed to the teeth with snapshots of me and the biobrats, and possibly even a letter from the psychologist I have to see anyway before the next egg donation, it will go okay. Maybe they'll just be so confused they won't know how to tell me no.
I went on to ask, far more nervously, about whether I was likely to have trouble convincing a physician to do the procedure on me, and she really wasn't able to say much because it varies by doctor, and that they try to avoid post-sterilization regret, which is more common when a woman has not had a child or children before the procedure. I said I understood. She asked my age and whether I had children, and so I had to do my "I have a biological child that I made with infertile friends of mine, and it's all open, and I've met her blah blah blah, and we're doing one more so she can have a sibling and then I'll feel like I've done my bit for the species" talk with an "um, I understand that open egg donorship is statistically unusual and I sure hope the doctors understand" ending tacked on. She said she enjoyed hearing that--I bet she gets to hear a hell of a lot of great stories with a job like hers. It still isn't clear how much trouble I'll really have, but I'm hoping that if I go in armed to the teeth with snapshots of me and the biobrats, and possibly even a letter from the psychologist I have to see anyway before the next egg donation, it will go okay. Maybe they'll just be so confused they won't know how to tell me no.
I'm surprised it would be that hard to find someone to do it...
Date: 2003-07-07 01:32 pm (UTC)Re: I'm surprised it would be that hard to find someone to do it...
Date: 2003-07-07 01:56 pm (UTC)(And every single one of the happy testimonials on the Essure page is from a woman with 2+ children. Sigh.)