Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £79.79 GBP
Regular price £84.99 GBP Sale price £79.79 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead

Reproductive Ageing

This book is based on the RCOG Study Group findings on reproductive ageing.

Susan Bewley (Edited by), William Ledger (Edited by), Dimitrios Nikolaou (Edited by)

9781906985134, Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG)

Paperback / softback, published 1 June 2009

382 pages
15 x 23 x 2 cm, 0.56 kg

Reproductive ageing affects both individuals and wider society, and obstetricians and gynaecologists are witness to the impact of reproductive ageing and to some of the fears and misapprehensions of the general public. This book raises awareness of societal trends and their implications. The wider importance of the subject to the whole of society is emphasized by contributions from outside the world of obstetrics and gynaecology, both within and outside medicine. The 56th RCOG Study Group brought together a range of experts to examine reproductive ageing. This book presents the findings of the Study Group, with sections covering: • background to ageing and demographics • basic science of reproductive ageing • pregnancy: the ageing mother and medical needs • the outcomes: children and mothers • future fertility insurance: screening, cryopreservation or egg donors? • sex beyond and after fertility • fertility treatment: science and reality - the NHS and the market • the future: dreams and waking up.

Part I. Background to Ageing and Demographics: 1. Ageing: what is it and why does it happen? Finbarr Martin and Jane Preston
2. Culture and reproductive ageing Maya Unnithan
3. Ageing
4. What has happened to reproduction in the 20th century? Beverley Botting
5. Trends in fertility: what does the 20th century tell us about the 21st? Stijn Hoorens
6. Demographics
Part II. Basic Science of Reproductive Ageing: 7. Is ovarian ageing inexorable? Roger Gosden and Lucinda Veeck Gosden
8. The science of ovarian ageing: how might knowledge be translated into practice? Stephen G. Hillier
9. Basic science: eggs and ovaries
10. Male reproductive ageing Herman Tournaye
11. The science of the ageing uterus and placenta Gordon C. S. Smith
12. Basic science: sperm and placenta
Part III. Pregnancy: The Ageing Mother and Medical Needs: 13. The effect of age on obstetric (maternal and fetal) outcomes Anna Kenyon and Susan Bewley
14. The older mother and medical disorders of pregnancy Mandish K. Dhanjal
15. The ageing mother and medical needs
Part IV. The Outcomes: Children and Mothers: 16. What is known about children born to older parents? Alastair Sutcliffe and Yasmin Baki
17. Consequences of changes in reproductive patterns on later health in women: a life course approach Gita Mishra and Rachel Cooper
18. The outcomes: children and mothers
Part V. Future Fertility Insurance: Screening, Cryopreservation or Egg Donors?: 19. Screening for early ovarian ageing Abha Maheshwari, Ahmed Gibreel and Siladitya Bhattacharya
20. Egg freezing: the reality and practicality Helen Picton and Emma Chambers
21. Assisted conception: uses and abuses Melanie Davies
22. Future fertility insurance
Part VI. Sex beyond and after Fertility: 23. Contraception for older couples Diana Mansour
24. Ageing, infertility and gynaecological conditions: how do they affect sexual function? Catherine Coulson
25. Sex beyond and after fertility
Part VII. Reproductive Ageing and the RCOG: An International College: 26. What should be the RCOG's relationship with older women? Donna Dickenson
27. Reproductive ageing and the RCOG
Part VIII. Fertility Treatment: Science and Reality - The NHS and the Market: 28. Evidence-based and cost-effective fertility investigation and treatment of older women: moving beyond NICE David Barlow
29. Bang for the buck: what purchasers and commissioners think and do Berkeley Greenwood
30. Fertility treatment: science and reality - the NHS and the market
Part IX. The Future: Dreams and Waking Up: 31. In our wildest dreams: making gametes Peter Braude
32. The future: dreams
33. Managing expectations and achieving realism: the individual journey from hope to closure Kate Brian
34. Managing expectations and achieving realism: the 'realpolitik' of reproductive ageing and its consequences Zoe Williams
35. The future: waking up
Part X. Consensus Views: 36. Consensus views arising from the 56th Study Group: Reproductive Ageing
Index.

Subject Areas: Midwifery [MQD], Gynaecology & obstetrics [MJT], Birth control, contraception, family planning [MBNH4], Medicine [M]

View full details