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CVS Health will be closing Encompass Fertility by CVS Pharmacy, discontinuing operations and medication shipments in the coming months. Current patients will be supported through the remainder of their treatment cycle. We are no longer accepting new patients.

CVS Health will continue supporting people on their family building or fertility preservation journeys, including dispensing of covered medications through CVS Specialty and medical benefit coverage through Aetna.

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What is ART?

We know having children is important to many families. When that hope is challenged by infertility, it often means going into a whole new world of questions, choices, emotions, and even a new language. It can be hard to follow all the terms and acronyms you will hear. Here are a few common ones that might help.

ART. Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART) is the broad term for certain fertility treatments. A treatment or procedure (technology) is done to help (assistive) a family to get pregnant (reproduction). There are various types of ART. But, it always involves handling eggs or embryos (fertilized eggs) outside of the body. Sometimes the woman’s own eggs and the man’s own sperm are used. Other times eggs, sperm or embryos are donated by someone else. When an egg is successfully fertilized, it can be transferred into the uterus where it will hopefully implant.

In vitro fertilization

The most common type of ART is in vitro fertilization or IVF. For IVF, a woman’s eggs are combined with a man’s sperm in a laboratory and embryos are formed. Then the embryos are transferred into the woman.

The IVF process happens in steps. First, the woman injects medication (shots) for about 2 weeks. The shots help her ovaries make more eggs. When the eggs are ready, they are carefully taken out (retrieved) while the woman is under anesthesia. To fertilize the egg, thousands of sperm are put near the egg. It takes one sperm to break through the hard outer layer of the egg and fertilize it. This becomes an embryo. When the embryos are ready, they can either be transferred right away into the uterus or frozen for future transfer.

Intracytoplasmic sperm injection

Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) is a method used during IVF treatment planning. Unlike IVF, one single sperm is injected right into a mature egg. This is done by a highly-trained embryologist. If fertilization is successful and the embryo continues to develop well, the embryo can be transferred into the uterus, tested more or frozen.

Intrauterine insemination

With intrauterine insemination (IUI), sperm is injected into the woman’s body, hoping that one of the sperm will reach the egg. IUI isn’t a type of ART because the egg stays in the woman’s body. But, it’s often thought of in the same category. The IUI procedure is similar in some ways to getting a Pap smear.

Ovarian stimulation

Not every family needs IVF. Some people don’t qualify for one. Some women may only need medications to help stimulate the ovaries. This helps make more mature eggs. The more eggs available, the greater the chance that one will fertilize. Some women have plenty of eggs, but they may need help (releasing the eggs). This is called ovulation induction. The woman will take a certain medication at the right time on the right day to make more mature eggs or to release them.

Surrogacy

Surrogacy is a form of ART. For these families, an embryo created by hopeful parents is transferred into another woman’s uterus. She will carry the baby to term.

There’s a lot to think about and decided when it comes to ART. Talk to your fertility team to learn about your options. They can help you decide what may be right for your family.


This information is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment. Talk to your doctor or health care provider about your medical condition, and prior to starting any new treatment. CVS Health® and/or its affiliates assumes no liability whatsoever for the information provided or for any diagnosis or treatment made as a result, nor is it responsible for the reliability of the content.

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