How many pregnancies are there where people need help?

The World Health Organization defines infertility as a person who has had normal sexual intercourse without contraception and has not conceived or failed to have children for 1 year. Its prevalence has been on the rise worldwide in the last decade or so. The results of a survey conducted by the World Health Organization in 33 centers in 25 countries in the mid- to late 1980s showed that about 5%-8% of couples in developed countries were affected by infertility, and the prevalence of infertility in some areas of developing countries could be as high as 30%, and about 6-15% in China, and the number of infertility patients worldwide was about 80-110 million. The increasing trend of infertility prevalence may be related to late marriage and childbirth, environmental pollution, survival pressure, abortion, and sexually transmitted diseases. For most infertile couples, “infertility” is one of the most stressful events they experience in their lives. After marriage, the desire to have children or not should be the desire of both partners. Some couples are desperate to get pregnant when they are released from contraception, and when they fail to do so, they become frustrated and anxious, questioning their ability to have children as a normal human being. It is not that people are more likely to suffer from infertility now than in the past; the problem is that people who are infertile are older, and women in particular are getting older. How many people need help to get pregnant? First, after the release of contraception the couple needs to relax their mindset and then not rush to try to conceive slowly, because the chance of conceiving in a month for women of normal reproductive age (non-infertility) is about 15-20%. Second, if ovulation needs to be determined, you can go to the hospital to monitor the follicles and guide intercourse to increase the chance of conception. If you are still not pregnant after trying to conceive or monitoring follicles + guided intercourse, both men and women need to go to a regular hospital for systematic examination and treatment in infertility to help conceive. Assistive technology pregnancy methods: 1. artificial insemination: painless, simple, good repeatability, about twice the pregnancy rate of the patient herself. 2. In vitro fertilization, i.e. IVF, is currently the most successful method of pregnancy assistance. The development of reproductive technology brings new treatments, so whatever the time, be convinced: it’s too early to give up! A word of advice: all that needs to be done is to find a regular hospital with a high level of technology to help you conceive under the guidance of professional reproductive technology!