Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Participants
- Declarations of personal interest
- Preface
- SECTION 1 BACKGROUND TO AGEING AND DEMOGRAPHICS
- SECTION 2 BASIC SCIENCE OF REPRODUCTIVE AGEING
- SECTION 3 PREGNANCY: THE AGEING MOTHER AND MEDICAL NEEDS
- SECTION 4 THE OUTCOMES: CHILDREN AND MOTHERS
- SECTION 5 FUTURE FERTILITY INSURANCE: SCREENING, CRYOPRESERVATION OR EGG DONORS?
- SECTION 6 SEX BEYOND AND AFTER FERTILITY
- SECTION 7 REPRODUCTIVE AGEING AND THE RCOG: AN INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE
- 26 What should be the RCOG's relationship with older women?
- 27 Reproductive ageing and the RCOG
- SECTION 8 FERTILITY TREATMENT: SCIENCE AND REALITY – THE NHS AND THE MARKET
- SECTION 9 THE FUTURE: DREAMS AND WAKING UP
- SECTION 10 CONSENSUS VIEWS
- Index
27 - Reproductive ageing and the RCOG
from SECTION 7 - REPRODUCTIVE AGEING AND THE RCOG: AN INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Participants
- Declarations of personal interest
- Preface
- SECTION 1 BACKGROUND TO AGEING AND DEMOGRAPHICS
- SECTION 2 BASIC SCIENCE OF REPRODUCTIVE AGEING
- SECTION 3 PREGNANCY: THE AGEING MOTHER AND MEDICAL NEEDS
- SECTION 4 THE OUTCOMES: CHILDREN AND MOTHERS
- SECTION 5 FUTURE FERTILITY INSURANCE: SCREENING, CRYOPRESERVATION OR EGG DONORS?
- SECTION 6 SEX BEYOND AND AFTER FERTILITY
- SECTION 7 REPRODUCTIVE AGEING AND THE RCOG: AN INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE
- 26 What should be the RCOG's relationship with older women?
- 27 Reproductive ageing and the RCOG
- SECTION 8 FERTILITY TREATMENT: SCIENCE AND REALITY – THE NHS AND THE MARKET
- SECTION 9 THE FUTURE: DREAMS AND WAKING UP
- SECTION 10 CONSENSUS VIEWS
- Index
Summary
Sean Kehoe: Thank you very much, Donna. Can I just pick you up on one thing? I am a gynae-oncologist and I remember the first BRCAl testing. The company was based in Scotland, presumably for legal reasons, and we got a letter from them. Essentially, what the woman had to do was sign a form, then get her GP to sign the form saying that she was counselled, and then send the blood away. Of course, anybody could sign it: they were not going back to check. That test disappeared. We got rid of them. I do not know how it was done but there was a lot of noise made. They tried once but I am sure they will come back again …
Donna Dickenson: There is a continual need to keep vigilant, because lots of companies can find similar things.
Diana Mansour: This is really more of comment: in Newcastle, when we recently opened a session for sexually transmitted infection screening in mature men, I asked: ‘What about the mature women?’ They said ‘It is different. The men are getting their infections elsewhere.’ Well, I am sure they are giving it to their wives …
Donna Dickenson: As in your slide, we could show graphically [laughs].
Diana Mansour: Very much so. I was really pleasantly surprised that you actually included that slide. We often think STIs [sexually transmitted infections] are infections only of the young women … purely because of statistics.
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- Reproductive Ageing , pp. 287 - 290Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009