
COVID-19 Vaccine and Pregnancy FAQ
Our advice for pregnant women or those considering pregnancy is to talk to your doctor, then if recommended, get the…
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Our advice for pregnant women or those considering pregnancy is to talk to your doctor, then if recommended, get the…
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Fertility surgery to remove uterine polyps didn’t keep Caitlin down and out, or even asleep! Learn about her successful surgery and the benefits of this new “awake” procedure in our latest patient story.
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Louisiana Health Daily covered our new Luminelle system for hysteroscopy surgery, a time & money saving procedure performed by Dr. Huber.
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FINO offers an advanced system for surgical procedures while awake to spare patients’ anxiety, recovery time and costs while improving outcomes.
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Dr. Sissy Sartor shares her thoughts on the baby bust, the importance of a positive patient rapport and women in the workforce in this edition of the New Orleans Magazine.
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That’s what Ashley and Scott thought before tumbling down the hole into the unfamiliar and scary world of secondary infertility, fertility medications and genetic disorders
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Article on BabyGaga features The Fertility Institute’s expertise on traveling during infertility treatments.
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Dr. Jay Huber spoke with CBS about the COVID-19 vaccine and fertility as some women are scared to get the vaccine due to social media rumors.
Read More![He said despite concerns about it causing infertility, women who got the vaccine in the clinical trial later got pregnant Logo of CBS station 4WWL, which did a story on COVID-19 vaccine and infertility | The Fertility Institute of New Orleans | NOLA and Baton RougeThe Fertility Institute’s Dr. Jay Huber spoke with WWL on the social media rumor that is scaring young women and preventing them from getting the COVID-19 vaccine due to infertility concerns. “That since has been debunked, and [regarding] the cause of fertility or infertility after the COVID-19 vaccine, we don’t have any data to suggest that is the case,” said Dr. Huber. He reported that the rumor started because the spike protein that the vaccine targets shares a small segment of genetic code similar to a placenta protein. So the question people were asking is would antibodies made by your immune system not only attack the virus, but the baby’s placenta as well? 4WWL](https://fertilityinstitute.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/4WWL.jpeg)
The Fertility Institute’s Dr. Jay Huber spoke with WWL on the social media rumor that is scaring young women and preventing them from getting the COVID-19 vaccine due to infertility concerns.
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Welcome to the Fertility Institute’s embryology lab. My name is Beanie and I’m one of the embryologists who has the…
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