News
Fertility platform to support women through the power of community

A new platform partners digital connection with a traditional community approach to fertility, to provide support for thousands of women in need.
Fertility Mapper provides women with a space to share expertly curated reviews and experiences of fertility health services, offering guidance, information on costs and education at the exact time it’s needed.
Women are able to openly share online their overall clinic experience, from how transparent they were about costs and treatments to how they communicated and how the process made them feel.
The founder, Kayleigh Hartigan, believes that the fertility health journey is often lonely, stigmatised, misleading and expensive and she’s now calling on women across the UK to give back to those in need by joining the platform to provide these insights.

Kayleigh Hartigan, founder of Fertility Mapper
Before launching Fertility Mapper, Hartigan has spent her career working on solutions to inaccessibility in the healthcare sector and has worked across the NHS, the Department of Health, WHO and the digital platform, HealthHero. She then moved into the tech space to drive accessibility and improved experience to those in need and now to spearhead the evolution of the women’s healthcare .
“Not a weekend goes by where the subject of fertility doesn’t come up with friends in hushed side conversations over dinner or coffee,” the founder says. “Given both my experience and personal journey, I’m asked frequently for informal advice on how much services should cost or the clinics my friends should be looking at.
“Realising that the subject of fertility health is misunderstood and questioned across the UK and not everyone has that friend in the know, I wanted to create a platform to empower women with the knowledge of others.”
Accessing funding for fertility services is very often a postcode lottery, which has led, in some cases, to financial deception and misinformation from services. This lack of accessible and trustworthy knowledge also means that women can end up paying upwards of £25,000 for services unnecessarily.
Hartigan says that in a world where Google seems to be the answer to everything, Fertility Mapper aims to guide women and help them make informed decisions. It has been developed to not only build a community of experts and women, but also create a movement of women who are often traditionally overlooked and help them navigate their fertility journey.
Share your review on fertilitymapper.com.
Fertility
Toxins and climate harms having ‘alarming’ effect on fertility, research warns

Simultaneous exposure to toxic chemicals and climate-related heat may be worsening fertility harms across humans and wildlife, research suggests.
The review of scientific literature looks at how endocrine-disrupting chemicals, often found in plastic, together with climate-related effects such as heat stress, are each linked to lower fertility and fecundity, meaning the ability to reproduce, across species including humans, wildlife and invertebrates.
Though the reproductive harms of each issue in isolation are well studied, there is little research on what happens when living organisms are exposed to both.
“Together, the two issues are likely to pose a greater threat to fertility, and the additive effect is “alarming”, said Susanne Brander, a study lead author and courtesy faculty at Oregon State University.
“You’re not just getting exposed to one, but two, stressors at the same time that both may affect your fertility, and in turn the overall impact is going to be a bit worse,” Brander said.
The paper looked at 177 studies.
Shanna Swan, a co-author on the new paper, co-produced a 2017 study that found sperm levels among men in western countries had fallen by more than 50 per cent over four decades. Other research has suggested human fertility has been declining at a similar rate.
The University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation has previously said the world was approaching a “low-fertility future”, with more than three quarters of countries below replacement rate by 2050.
The new paper’s authors focused on the effects of endocrine-disrupting chemicals and substances, including microplastics, bisphenol, phthalates and PFAS.
These are thought to cause a range of serious reproductive problems, disrupt hormones and be a potential driver of falling fertility.
Brander said the harms linked to these chemicals are often similar across organisms, from invertebrates to humans.
Phthalates, for example, have been linked to altered sperm shape in invertebrates, spermatogenesis in rodents, meaning sperm production, and reduced sperm counts in humans.
PFAS are also thought to affect sperm quality, and both have been linked to hormone disruption.
The chemicals are widespread in consumer goods, so people are often regularly exposed.
Meanwhile, previous research has shown how rising temperatures, lower oxygen levels and heat stress, among other effects linked to climate change, may also worsen infertility.
Heat stress has been found to affect human hormones, and is linked to spermatogenesis in rodents and bulls.
Research shows temperature also plays a role in sex determination in fish, reptiles and amphibians.
The species has evolved to choose which sex it produces in part based on temperature, and the heating planet can “push it too far in one direction or the other, which overrides that evolutionary benefit”, Brander said.
Similarly, many endocrine disruptors may alter environmental sex determination.
The study set out some of the overlapping effects of chemical exposure and climate change across taxonomic groups, from invertebrates to humans.
In birds, for example, exposure to increased temperature, PFAS, organochlorines and pyrethroids may each individually cause abnormal sperm, increased fledgling mortality, abnormal testes and population decline.
“What happens if they’re exposed to more than one of those stressors at the same time? There has been little exploration of that question.
“Even if there have not been a lot of studies looking at these simultaneously, if you have two different factors that both cause the same adverse effect, then there’s a likelihood that they are going to be additive,” Brander said.
Katie Pelch, a senior scientist with the Natural Resources Defense Council nonprofit, who was not part of the study, said the authors had reviewed high-quality science.
She said she wanted to see more examples of the overlap in impacts, but agreed with the overall premise.
“It is likely [multiple stressors] would have an additive effect, at very least, even if they have different mechanisms of harm,” Pelch added.
The solution to the systemic problems would involve tackling climate change and reducing the use of toxic chemicals.
The study cites the global reduction in the use of DDT and PCBs achieved under the Stockholm Convention as an example of an effective measure, but Brander said much more is needed.
“There is enough evidence in both areas to act to reduce our impact on the planet,” she said.
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