Trump has asked for more babies, but released fertility experts

Every year, tens of thousands of young women choose their eggs, an expensive and sometimes painful process. When more and more Americans are moving the fees, the numbers are growing.
But there are many strangers: What is the optimal donor age for freezing? What are the success rates? And critically: How long take frozen eggs?
The answers to these questions may be more difficult to find. In its drastic reduction in centers for the control and prevention of diseases, the Trump government resigned a federal research team that collected and analyzed data from fertility clinics to improve the results.
The discharge of the six-person operation is “a real critical loss,” said Aaron Levine, professor at Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School of Public Policy at Georgia Tech, who worked with the CDC team on research projects.

“They had the most comprehensive data on fertility clinics, and their core value was the truth in advertising for patients.”
Barbara Collura, Managing Director of Resolve: The National Infrialtility Association, said that the loss of the CDC team is a setback for sterile couples and women who often think about freezing and the banking business of eggs.

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