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13/Mar/2026

You did everything right. Every injection, every scan, every instruction followed. You let yourself believe this time would be it. And then the call came, or the test showed negative, and the world just seemed to stop for a moment.

A failed IVF cycle is a loss. It may not be recognised that way by the people around you  who might offer well-meaning but unhelpful comments about ‘staying positive’ or ‘trying again’  but it is a loss. And it’s okay to grieve it properly before you think about what’s next.

When you’re ready: why did it fail?

This is always the first question, and it deserves a real answer rather than a vague reassurance. Most IVF failures come down to: embryo quality  even a beautifully developing embryo may carry chromosomal errors that prevent it from implanting or continuing. Implantation failure  the uterus not accepting the embryo even when conditions seem ideal. Timing  the transfer may not have happened in the optimal window of uterine receptivity. And occasionally, unknown factors  which is genuinely maddening to hear, but is real.

What a good clinic does differently after failure

A failed cycle is not just a setback  it’s information. At Vedansha Hospital, after a failed attempt we do a structured review before recommending any next steps. This isn’t about blame; it’s about making the next cycle smarter than the last one.

Investigations we may consider include ERA (Endometrial Receptivity Analysis) to check whether the transfer was timed correctly, sperm DNA fragmentation if not previously tested, PGT-A to test embryos for chromosomal normality before the next transfer, hysteroscopy to look closely at the inside of the uterus, and immune testing in cases of recurrent failure.

Not all of these are relevant for every case. The point is: we don’t just repeat the same cycle and hope harder. We find out what we can and act on it.

How long before trying again?

Physically, a new cycle can usually begin after your next period  four to eight weeks post-transfer. Emotionally, that timeline is entirely yours. We’ve seen couples come back in six weeks. We’ve seen others take a year. Both are completely valid.

What we do ask is that before any next cycle, you come in for a proper debrief. Not to be cheered up  but to understand what happened, and what, if anything, should change.

When the option is donor eggs or surrogacy

After multiple failed cycles, this conversation sometimes needs to happen. Donor eggs remove the egg quality variable entirely and often dramatically improve success rates. Surrogacy is relevant when there’s a uterine factor making pregnancy unsafe or implantation impossible.

These are deeply personal options, and they deserve space and honest discussion  not a rushed recommendation. At Vedansha Hospital, we approach these conversations with care.

If you’ve been through a failed cycle  here or elsewhere  come and talk to us. A second opinion after failure is always worth having. And sometimes, a different pair of eyes sees exactly what needs to change.


13/Mar/2026

More women are attempting IVF in their forties than ever before. Some are doing so for the first time  careers, relationships, circumstances brought them here later. Others have been on this journey for years. Either way, the question is the same: is it still possible?

The answer is: yes, it can be. But it comes with a different set of conversations.

Why age affects IVF success

The core issue isn’t your health, your fitness, or how young you look and feel. It’s your eggs. Women are born with all the eggs they’ll ever have, and those eggs age along with the rest of the body. By the early forties, a significant proportion of eggs have chromosomal abnormalities  which can lead to failed fertilisation, embryos that don’t develop properly, failed implantation, or early miscarriage.

Egg quantity also falls. After 40, ovarian reserve drops noticeably  fewer eggs are retrieved per stimulation cycle, which means fewer embryos to select from.

What are the actual success rates?

For women using their own eggs: roughly 30 to 35 percent per cycle between 40 and 41, around 20 to 25 percent at 42 to 43, and lower beyond that. These numbers vary depending on individual egg quality and other factors.

With donor eggs  from a younger woman  success rates typically jump to 50 to 65 percent per cycle, because egg quality is no longer the limiting factor. This is an option many women in their mid-to-late forties choose, and it leads to healthy pregnancies and healthy babies every day.

Should you try with your own eggs first?

This is deeply personal, and there’s no universally right answer. Many women want to try with their own eggs before considering alternatives  and that’s completely understandable. What we ask at Vedansha Hospital is that this decision be made with full information.

We’ll run your ovarian reserve tests (AMH, antral follicle count), look at your overall reproductive health, and give you an honest probability assessment before you commit to a cycle. We’ll also be upfront about when we think the evidence suggests moving to donor eggs would serve you better.

Genetic testing of embryos

For women over 40, PGT-A (preimplantation genetic testing) is often recommended. Embryos are tested for chromosomal abnormalities before transfer, so only genetically normal ones are placed in the uterus. This reduces miscarriage risk substantially and improves the chances of a successful ongoing pregnancy. It adds cost, but it can save you from repeated failed transfers.

Pregnancy after 40  the health side

Pregnancies conceived after 40, whether naturally or via IVF, are monitored more closely. There’s a higher risk of gestational diabetes, elevated blood pressure, and a few other complications. None of this makes it dangerous  it just means close, careful antenatal care, which is something Vedansha Hospital provides.

Women in their forties have healthy pregnancies and healthy babies all the time. The path may require more planning and more support  but it is a real path. Come in and let’s look at what yours looks l


13/Mar/2026

If you’ve started researching IVF, you’ve already noticed that the numbers are all over the place. One clinic advertises a price that seems manageable. Another quotes something double that. And you have no idea what’s actually included or why the gap is so large.

This confusion is unfortunately common  and sometimes, it’s deliberate. So let’s lay this out clearly.

The headline price is rarely the real price

Most base IVF prices that clinics advertise cover the procedure itself  the egg retrieval, the lab work, and the embryo transfer. What they often don’t include: the stimulation medications (hormonal injections that can cost 30,000 to 80,000 rupees or more), the pre-cycle diagnostic tests, the ICSI procedure if needed for male factor issues, embryo freezing and storage charges, the frozen embryo transfer (FET) cost if the fresh transfer doesn’t work, and consultant fees.

By the time you add all of this up, the actual cost of a complete IVF cycle in India is typically somewhere between 1.5 lakh and 2.5 lakh rupees. At Vedansha Hospital, we give you a full cost breakdown from the start  including the things other clinics leave for later.

Where does the money actually go?

Understanding the cost breakdown makes it easier to evaluate what you’re paying for. The stimulation medications are a major chunk  these are specialised hormonal injections, often imported, and they’re not cheap. The embryology lab  equipment, consumables, maintenance of strict quality standards  is another significant cost. Add the specialist team (fertility doctor, embryologist, anaesthesiologist, nurses), and the investigations required before and during the cycle, and the numbers start to make more sense.

A lower cost sometimes reflects genuine efficiency and leaner overheads. But sometimes it reflects corners being cut  a shared embryology lab, less experienced embryologists, or cost of medications being added on after you’ve committed.

Questions to ask any clinic before you sign up

Is the embryology lab on-site? What does the quoted price include, and what’s additional? Do you have your own embryologist or is that outsourced? What are your success rates, and how are they calculated? Are medications included, and if not, what should I budget?

These questions aren’t rude  they’re sensible. Any good clinic will answer them without hesitation.

Does insurance cover IVF?

Most standard health insurance policies in India still do not cover IVF. This is changing slowly  a few policies now include partial coverage for infertility investigations or treatment. It’s worth checking specifically with your insurer rather than assuming.

Making it workable financially

At Vedansha Hospital, we understand that the cost of IVF is a real barrier for many families. We offer structured payment options including EMI plans, and our counselling team will walk you through what to expect financially before you begin  so nothing surprises you midway. Because when you’re already dealing with the emotional demands of fertility treatment, financial stress is the last thing you need.

IVF After 40 at Vedansha Hospital

If you’re over 40 and considering IVF treatment, book a consultation at Vedansha Hospital today to discuss your options with our fertility specialists.


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16/Jan/2026

A woman’s health is not just about one phase of life. It changes, evolves, and needs care at every step.

At Vedansha Hospital, Nagpur, we believe women deserve support that goes beyond pregnancy or IVF. From your first gynecology consultation, to managing hormonal health, menstrual concerns, PCOS, fertility planning, pregnancy care, safe delivery, and even post-motherhood wellness – we’re here through it all.

Because every woman’s journey is different. Some come to us with questions. Some come with hopes. Some come seeking clarity, comfort, or confidence.

Our approach is simple – listen first, treat with care, and walk with you for the long term. With experienced gynecologists, advanced diagnostics, compassionate counselling, and a focus on overall well-being, Vedansha is a place where women feel understood, not rushed.

Whether it’s routine gynecology care, maternity, IVF, or lifelong women’s health support —

Vedansha Hospital is with you. Always.

Vedansha Hospital, Nagpur

IVF Clinic | Maternity Centre | Complete Women’s Healthcare

#VedanshaHospital #WomensHealthCare #GynecologyCare #MaternityCare #IVFSupport

Feel the Joy of Parenthood with Vedansha Hospital, Nagpur. 

For queries related to Maternity, contact 9168628982

Or Visit: Vedansha Hospital, 30, Surendra Nagar, WHC Road, Nagpur. 

 


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16/Jan/2026

https://youtube.com/shorts/rhaaPstoRyE?si=njlDfFBNY2B7UpE7

7 years of marriage. And now, two tiny heartbeats. Guided by Dr. Sangeeta Tajpuriya, this IVF journey culminated into a double joy at Vedansha Hospital, Nagpur. Hope, Happiness and start of new phase of life for this couple

#IVFinNagpur #IVFSuccess #TwinJoy #VedanshaHospital #ParenthoodJourney

Feel the Joy of Parenthood with Vedansha Hospital, Nagpur. For queries related to Maternity, contact 9168628982

Or Visit: Vedansha Hospital, 30, Surendra Nagar, WHC Road, Nagpur. Vedansha MaternityService 


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Our pioneering work has led to the development and implementation of new technologies and methods to overcome both female and male infertility. All of these services under one roof means that your care is never “outsourced”. Our beautiful and spacious hospital provides discretion and confidentiality. We understand our patients are placing their hopes and dreams in our hands.

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