What is Fertility Therapy?
Fertility Therapy is safe, painless, non invasive and often immediately effective. It can to get
to the root cause of the issue, for example, depression, emotions and stress and allow the body to heal itself without the use of medication or touch
What is involved
Suzanne offers an initial 30-minute consultation, which is free of charge (with no obligation) and this will explain how the process works.
A one-to-one appointment normally lasts 2- 4 hours.
The number of appointments needed depends on the client although often
just one appointment is sufficient.
Personal trauma
A traumatic experience doesn't always have to involve an accident that results in hospitalisation. Do you remember being a small child and being terrified by a big dog? Maybe it was your parents arguing? Or perhaps it was the death of a loved one? Any of these events can be perceived by our body as a traumatic experience. It is at these times of trauma that cell receptorscan shut down and cause health issues later in life. By accessing these specific stored memories and resolving them, the closed cell receptors open up, and the body is able to go about healing itself in a natural way.
Factors contributing to infertility
- Depression can cause infertility, infertility can cause depression - a circle of disappointment. Women with depressive symptoms are half as likely to conceive as non-depressed women.
- Emotions can unknowingly block fertility.
- Stress is known to cause infertility and miscarriage.
- Previous miscarriage or termination.
- Diet - A healthy diet is vital and certain minerals and vitamins are especially important for both potential parents. A poor diet may contribute to infertility.
Facts and figures
- Women with a history of depressive symptoms reported twice the rate of subsequent infertility. (Psychosomatic Medicine, 1995, vol. 57).
- Women with depression, when treated showed a 60 percent viable pregnancy rate within six months, contrasting with 24 percent when depression went untreated. (Journal of American Medical Womens Association, 1999, vol.54)
- Women who experienced depression following the failure of their first in vitro fertilization (IVF), had much lower pregnancy rates that their non depressed counterparts during their second IVF cycle (Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 1993, vol. 37).
- Another study (Fertility Sterility, 1998, vol. 69) suggests that because mind/body programs are effective for reducing negative emotions that may impair IVF success, patients should be offered such a program in conjunction with IVF.
- It has been reported that due to the stress of I.V.F. male sperm count can often decline during the programme.