Simon Fishel grew up in Liverpool in a non-academic household. He struggled to find a career, but eventually joined Robert Edwards and worked with him during his early IVF pioneering work, becoming part of the team in the world’s first IVF clinic, with all the trials and tribulations that involved at the time, including a writ for murder!
As the science developed over the decades so did Fishel’s career, as he sought to do more for patients, and to teach the new technologies to doctors all over the world. He came up against regulatory and establishment barriers, including fighting a 3-year legal case in the High Court of Justice, and a death threat from a doctor if he refused to work with him.
The clinic he founded has grown into the largest IVF group in the UK, developing new procedures for patients who needed these to enable them to have their children, and Fishel has helped establish clinics throughout the world, even being invited to introduce IVF to China.
This is a gripping account from the frontline of fertility treatment, revealing not only the scientific advances involved but the human cost and rewards behind this life-changing technology.
Mục lục
List of Figures
Foreword
Special Note
1. Nobody Said It Would Be Easy
2. Bourn Hall: The World’s First IVF Clinic
1980–1985
3. Beginnings
1953–1980
4. Nottingham to Rome and Back
1985–1991
5. The Nurture Years
1991–1997
6. Bankruptcy Looms
1997–2001
7. CARE: The Battle for Miracles Continues
1997–Present
8. The DNA of IVF
9. The Legacy of IVF
About the Author .
Acknowledgements
Giới thiệu về tác giả
The world’s first ‘test tube’ baby.