Current:Home > NewsABC News correspondent Rebecca Jarvis details infertility, surrogacy experience for 'GMA' -Thrive Capital Insights
ABC News correspondent Rebecca Jarvis details infertility, surrogacy experience for 'GMA'
SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-09 20:53:55
ABC News correspondent Rebecca Jarvis is sharing her experience with infertility in an essay shared with "Good Morning America" Wednesday.
The essay comes after the "long road" of Jarvis' nearly decade-long struggle with infertility. The chief business, technology and economics correspondent and her husband, Matt Hanson, welcomed a son, Leo, via surrogate earlier this month.
"It has been a very long road for us, for fertility, for pregnancy," she wrote. "And through the journey, I've come to see how common it is and how many families are facing these challenges — the emotional and the physical toll, the costs involved, the sadness and heartbreak and the hope, too."
The journalist started trying to get pregnant with the couple's first child, 4-year-old Isabel, almost 10 years ago, which involved constant doctor's visits and appointments, tests and eight rounds of in vitro fertilization, she wrote.
In vitro fertilization, or IVF, is a treatment in which eggs and sperm are combined in a laboratory to create embryos, then transferred into a uterus, according to Yale Medicine. The treatment is often used for people with a variety of infertility causes, including blocked, damaged or missing fallopian tubes or severe sperm abnormalities.
The hardest part for Jarvis was having her experience go "unexplained," she wrote: "I know now, having gone through this, that that's the case for so many women."
Two years ago Jarvis suffered a miscarriage after undergoing another round of IVF in the hopes of having a second child.
The couple asked doctors, "What do we do? This keeps happening."
Estrogenis one of two major sex hormones in females. Here's why it matters.
"Every time I lost a pregnancy, to have that taken away was so tough," the former investment banker wrote. "I will also say, as a mom to Isabel, it was very tough for me because I wanted to be a great mom to her too. I didn't want that pain that I felt to take away from the joy that I felt with her."
Jarvis' doctor suggested surrogacy, which she wrote was difficult to hear at the time.
"It can take a very, very long time to match with a surrogate," she wrote. "And one of the things that we really talked a lot about beforehand was whether or not we could even ask another person to do something like that with their body."
Eventually, the couple found a surrogate — "our angel," Jarvis wrote — but the uncertainty remained. "(I) didn't want to feel that massive excitement and that massive joy until I really felt that it was truly a sure thing," she wrote. "But when I did allow myself to feel that way, it was truly the best feeling."
Earlier in November, the couple flew from New York City to be at their surrogate's side as she gave birth to their son.
Jarvis thanked their surrogate and her family: "I just wanted to hug her and give her all of our love that we were also pouring over Leo, because there's no way this would've been possible without her."
I'm single at 35 and want a family.This decision brought an immense amount of relief.
veryGood! (9865)
Related
- Organizers cancel Taylor Swift concerts in Vienna over fears of an attack
- Jason Kelce addresses retirement rumors: 'Too much emotion' to make that decision now
- Retail sales up strongly in December as Americans showed continued willingness to spend
- SKIMS Launches the Ultimate Strapless Bra for the Most Natural-Looking Cleavage You’ve Ever Seen
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Capitol rioter who assaulted at least 6 police officers is sentenced to 5 years in prison
- Gunmen abduct volunteer searcher looking for her disappeared brother, kill her husband and son
- British brothers jailed for stealing Ming Dynasty artifacts from a Geneva museum
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Prosecutor probing TV studio attack in Ecuador is shot dead in Guayaquil
Ranking
- Immigration issues sorted, Guatemala runner Luis Grijalva can now focus solely on sports
- Sales of Apple’s premium watches banned again by court over blood-oxygen sensor patent dispute
- Kate, the Princess of Wales, hospitalized for up to two weeks with planned abdominal surgery
- Brothers elected mayors of neighboring New Jersey towns
- Kehlani Responds to Hurtful Accusation She’s in a Cult
- 3M now issuing payments to vets as part of $6 billion settlement over earplugs
- Who is James Dolan? Knicks, Rangers owner sued for sexual assault, trafficking
- 5 people killed by tractor trailer after leaving vehicles on snowy Pennsylvania highway
Recommendation
A Georgia governor’s latest work after politics: a children’s book on his cats ‘Veto’ and ‘Bill’
Gisele Bündchen Reveals She's Getting Pushback From Her and Tom Brady's Kids Amid Divorce Adjustment
Ryan Gosling's kids still haven't seen 'Barbie' movie — even though he plays Ken
Nella Domenici, daughter of late US senator from New Mexico, launches her own bid for a seat
The Daily Money: Disney+ wants your dollars
Kenya doomsday cult leader, 30 others face charges of murdering 191 children; more charges to follow
Montana man pleads guilty to possessing homemade bombs in school threat case
Florida GOP lawmakers seek to ban rainbow flags in schools, saying they’re bad for students