Kansas City Egg Donation Program – What Happens for a Selected Donor?

Published: 14th April 2011
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A Kansas City egg donation program can give women with reproduction problems in the home of Count Basie a chance at getting pregnant. Put simply, the donor's eggs are extracted from her body to be fertilized with the father from the desiring couple. Then the fertilized egg is inserted in the desiring mother for development. There are many qualifications a woman must meet in order to become an egg donor, but after that, a couple simply has to select you as their donor to start the process. Here is a look at what happens for the donor after that fated selection.

Once a donor is chosen to be a part of a Kansas City egg donation program, she must visit the doctor to determine when her ovulation cycle is and how fertile her body is naturally. The doctor will prescribe some medication to increase the egg count in the body and ensure that the eggs they extract are as fit for reproduction as possible. Woman at the beginning of their donating years (around the age of 21) usually do not have to take as much medication as "older" donors because their bodies are naturally more fertile.


There are a few other doctor visits involved to check on the donor's progress and get her ovulation cycle to match up with the potential mother's. That way when the eggs are extracted through the Kansas City egg donation program, they can be fertilized and inserted in just a few day's time. All of the doctor visits are paid for by the desiring family, and so are any travel expenses a woman may encounter for those visits. When the day finally comes to donate, the donor must go under anesthesia for ten to fifteen minutes so her body can remain perfectly still for removal. Then, without any cutting whatsoever, the doctor will extract the eggs from the ovaries.

A donor will have to remain abstinent for a couple weeks before the procedure to ensure that she does not get pregnant instead of the hopeful mother. That would ruin the Kansas City egg donation program entirely. Donors do get paid a hefty amount of money for their services after the eggs have been extracted successfully. A new donor may make anywhere from $4,500 to $5,500 for her first cycle, but then most rounds after that will increase by $500 or more. A woman can donate up to seven times in her life to fit within national rules, though most women will only donate up to five.


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