In 1971, a group of researchers founded the Monash IVF Research Program with the mission to discover how in vitro fertilization, or IVF, techniques could become a treatment for infertility in both men and women. The program included researcher Carl Wood and colleagues John Leeton, Alex Lopata, Alan Trounson, and Ian Johnston at the Queen Victoria Medical Center and Royal Women’s Hospital in Melbourne, Australia. Since the program’s establishment in 1971, the Monash IVF Research Program has helped to develop and implement many IVF technologies still used in clinical practice as of 2020. Additionally, the program established some of the first successful IVF pregnancies and births. As of 2020, the Monash IVF Research Program is one of Australia’s leading fertility programs and has used their technologies to help provide IVF treatment to thousands of infertile men and women.
Details
- History of the Monash IVF Research Program from 1971 to 1989
- Tuoti, Whitney Alexandra (Author)
- Darby, Alexis (Editor)
- Arizona State University. School of Life Sciences. Center for Biology and Society. Embryo Project Encyclopedia. (Publisher)
- Arizona Board of Regents (Publisher)
- Organization
- Fertilization in Vitro
- Fertilization in vitro, Human
- Fertilization in vitro, Human--Moral and ethical aspects
- Micropropagation
- Ovulation--Induction
- Ovulation
- Gynecology
- Reproductive Health
- reproductive medicine
- Frozen human embryos
- Ovulation Induction
- In vitro fertilization
- Fertilized Egg
- Fertility clinics
- Infertility, Female
- Infertility, Male
- Organizations
- Reproduction
- IVF techniques
- origins of IVF