Lesbian couples who are pregnant and give birth

A lesbian couple in Texas (USA) gave birth to a first-born son, thanks to the new technique called Effortless Reciprocal IVF.

The happy couple is Ashleigh and Bliss Coulter . They went to CARE fertility support center (in Bedford, Texas, USA) to get new IVF techniques from doctors.

Doctors sucked eggs from Bliss (36) and then fertilized the donor's sperm to make embryos. Later, the embryo was transferred back into Bliss's body, according to the Daily Mail on October 29.

Picture 1 of Lesbian couples who are pregnant and give birth
Ashleigh and Bliss Coulter gave birth to a handsome son thanks to the new IVF technique.(DAILY MAIL SCREENING PICTURE).

However, Bliss did not want to conceive this baby, so the embryo was removed and placed in Ashleigh (28 years old).

Before Ashleigh started her pregnancy, she was given estrogen and another dose of progesterone. After that, the doctors transferred the embryos to her.

By June 2018, Ashleigh had born a healthy son (named Stetson). The boy weighs 3.7 kg.

Ashleigh and Bliss met 6 years ago, loved and married in June 2015. Like other couples, they want to have children. Bliss wants to have a blood relative to her but doesn't want to become pregnant.

One day, one of their friends advised them to watch an introductory video of the Effortless Reciprocal IVF technique conducted by Dr. Kathy Doody of the CARE fertility support center.

In this technique, eggs are fertilized with donor sperm in a plastic device called a capsule called INVOcell instead of in the laboratory. The whole device is placed in a woman's body to help the embryo warm and remove toxic substances, such as poison gas.

In 2016, they decided to meet Dr. Doody for this new technique, according to the Daily Mail.
Usually the egg is removed from Bliss's body so the embryo will be re-inserted into her body. But because she refused to become pregnant, the doctor put it in Ashleigh's body.

This is a special case that, according to world medical literature, doctors have never done so before.