The Bossticks - Dr. Shahin Ghadir On Fertility, In Vitro, Freezing Eggs, & Conception Issues
Episode Date: February 25, 2021#334: On this episode we are joined by Dr. Shahin Ghadir. Dr. Ghadir is a founding partner of Southern California Reproductive Center. Dr. Ghadir is board-certified in both Obstetrics and Gynecology a...s well as Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility. On today's episode we discuss fertility, In vitro fertilization, when to freeze your eggs, and conception issues. To connect with Dr. Shahin Ghadir click HERE To connect with Lauryn Evarts click HERE To connect with Michael Bosstick click HERE Read More on The Skinny Confidential HERE For Detailed Show Notes visit TSCPODCAST.COM To Call the Him & Her Hotline call: 1-833-SKINNYS (754-6697) This episode is brought to you by ARRAE Arrae was created to help women feel the best so they can be their best, through targeted products which are 100% natural, filler-free, organic, and formulated by a Naturopathic Doctor. For 10% off, go to arrae.com and use code 'tsc' at checkout. This episode is brought to you by Sakara This year, turn your resolutions into reality. Whether you're looking to try plant-based eating, build an empowered body, boost skin's glow, or simply feel your very best, Sakara makes it easy to create rituals that last. Sakara is a wellness company rooted in the transformative power of plant-based food. Their menu of creative, chef-crafted breakfasts, lunches, and dinners changes weekly, so you'll never get bored. And it's delivered fresh, anywhere in the U.S. And right now, Sakara is offering our listeners 20% off their first order when they go to www.sakara.com/skinny and enter code SKINNY at checkout. This episode is brought to you by Pique Tea Ever since I discovered Pique Tea, I've been obsessed. I now incorporate at least a cup of Pique into my daily routine and it's really been increasing my productivity levels. Pique Teas are made from organic high quality tea leaves and ingredients sourced from around the world, delivering up to 12x more antioxidants than any ofor heavy metals, pesticides and toxic mold so you know you're getting the best stuff. Use code "SKINNY" for 10% off piquetea.com. They rarely (if ever) have sales so you'd definitely want to check this out! P.S. This discount does not apply to their fermented pu'er due to their limited quantity.ther tea. What's better is that they are all Triple Toxin Screened Produced by Dear Media
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And now Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic are bringing you alone for the ride.
Get ready for some major realness.
Welcome to the skinny confidential, him and her.
If you are older, I don't even think you should wait six months.
I think you should first immediately talk to a doctor because if you're 37,
and you want to have four kids.
If you have a kid and you deliver at 38 and next time you consider it, you're 40,
well, guess what?
The chances of baby number 2, 3, and 4 are almost now zero.
Welcome back.
Welcome back to the skinny confidential him and her show.
That clip was from our guests of the show today, Dr. Shaheen Goddier.
And on this episode, we are talking all about reproduction, freezing eggs, freezing sperm, creating embryos.
A lot of wild stuff here.
Science is pretty incredible.
For those you that are new to this show, my name is Michael Bostic.
I'm a serial entrepreneur and brand builder.
Most recently the CEO of the podcast network, Dear Media.
And typically, I am joined by my co-host, the real star of the show, Lauren Everts Bostick.
But today, she literally called me in a panic and said, she's not coming home.
I thought she was telling me she was leaving me forever.
But it turns out she's just going out with the girls getting a couple drinks, laying a few back,
and said, you know what, Michael?
You're going to have to carry the show on your own.
And I said, oh shit.
I don't think that's what the people want.
But here I am.
I'm delivering because she's on the interview.
So don't worry if you want to listen to her.
She's in the interview.
She just left me for the intro.
And hopefully I don't butcher it.
If I do, Lauren, that's on you.
I shouldn't be doing this on my own.
I really need a co-host here.
I should have known.
She came down here.
I was in my office and she came in looking like a complete fire 10,
was all dressed up.
And I thought it was for me.
And then I went, I finished my work and I went out to look at her thinking,
oh, God, we're getting dressed up tonight.
this is going to lead to something good for me.
And she was gone.
And I text her and turns out she's having a night with the girls.
So I don't get to have any of that absolute snack that I saw walk into my office.
She's giving that to the rest of the world.
Not me.
I'm just left here alone doing the intro to the podcast down here in this murky man cave.
Anyways, I digress.
All right.
So Dr. Shaheen Goddier, guys.
This was an interesting episode all about reproduction.
And like I said earlier, this is all about alternative ways to get pregnant.
conceive talking about freezing eggs, freezing sperm, reproduction, when to see a specialist,
who to see, creating embryos, what age, the pros and cons. We really dive into it and answer all of
these questions. I don't think this is an area that we've really gone into on the show before.
And I know it's something that so many people have questions about, especially when the topics of
in vitro and how it all works and surrogates and all of that. So Dr. Sahin-Gadir is a great person to talk
to. He is a founding partner of the Southern California Reproductive Center. He's board-certified
in both obstetrics and gynecology and reproductive endocrinology and infertility. So who better to have on
their show? With that, Dr. Sahin-Gadir, welcome to the skinny confidential, him and her show.
This is the skinny confidential, him and her. We have a doctor in the house. I am so excited for this
episode. Can you give our audience a little intro? Tell us about your background. Absolutely. I'm
Dr. Shaheen Gadir. I'm a reproductive endocrinology and infertility specialist at Southern California
reproductive center. Basically, I'm a fertility doctor. And we are the largest center on the west coast
of the United States. We were very proud that last week, a article came out top five clinics in the world.
Congratulations. We were the one and only in the United States. So we're very proud. All the docs at
Cedars, all the docs at UCLA, and 29 other doctors in town use our IVF lab, because it's considered
to be one of the number one IVF laboratories in the country. And we've had one of the highest
success rates in the country as well. We have a normally, we used to have an international
following of patients coming to us from around the world. Unfortunately, the last year that's
gotten limited. But even with last year's horrible situation, we were busier than the year before
with a lot of people that are home and figuring this is probably a really good time for me to go in.
And we had a very successful year last year with getting people pregnant and freezing eggs
and tucking things away for people that aren't ready yet. I have a hundred questions. And we have
primarily a female audience, millennials. But first, I would like to know how you got into this.
It's a really good comment. And I don't want anyone to do that.
judge, but I went to med school and then I realized I did not love being around sick people at all.
So I decided, okay, I'm going to do obstetrics and gynecology.
Young women, mostly fun stuff and good stuff.
And I loved it.
I absolutely adored it.
The lifestyle is very difficult delivering babies for your entire life and having no freedom.
And I did a rotation in reproductive medicine and I absolutely fell in love with it.
My personality fit really well.
I love the patient population.
It is something that is a limited scope of service, but I actually like that because it allows me to do that really, really well for patients.
So I don't have to do 50,000 different things in my practice, but I do the things I do and I do them really well.
So that's actually been a turn on for me for that career choice.
And to be very honest, I do things that give me the satisfaction and gratifying feeling of what I'm able to accomplish in people's lives,
that most people in their careers don't ever get anywhere near that.
And it's an incredibly, incredibly rewarding career.
I imagine you get very close to their patients because, like you said, you're bringing them so
much joy if they've been struggling to have a child and all of a sudden you're somebody
that can help them accomplish that.
I imagine like that patient, Dr. Bond gets very close, very quickly.
It does.
It gets very close.
It gets very close very quickly.
Luckily, I've had the fortune of becoming very good friends with many, many of my patients.
Even the ones that I don't become good friends with, would they stay in touch?
I get tons and tons of Christmas pictures.
I get random emails just taking a picture of their kid in the park and just thanking me for changing
their lives.
Little things like that that really put a smile on my face on a daily basis.
Why didn't you like being around sick people?
I can imagine some of the reasons, but was there a specific reason?
I was doing a rotation at a county hospital, seeing things I've never seen before.
Can you give us something?
I'm someone who's so scared of everything with hospitals.
So I saw something that I'll like never forget for the rest of my life.
And I'm like a little, nice little Jewish kid grew up here in L.A. and went to the Beverly Hills
Unified School District. So getting into a county hospital where like five inches of someone's leg was missing from a diabetic ulcer, I didn't even know those things existed.
Maybe I saw things that were extremes that I probably never would have seen in a hospital environment here at Cedars.
But I realized I found my calling of doing something that's so rewarding, pleasant in many ways, and usually ends up in a great outcome.
Here's my question. Is there more people that are having fertility problems now, or are people just
talking about it more? Both. Both of those are completely true. When I started my career 16 years ago
at my clinic, very few people were talking about anything. Coincidentally, we had one child and was
super easy. The second child, super easy, but ended in a miscarriage. And after that, we had about
two years of difficulty getting pregnant and had to go down the IVF path ourselves.
So my wife and I have twins.
They just turned nine.
And it was the best thing I think we've ever done.
Taking off the pressure of having future embryos sitting there waiting was huge for us.
So we, I believe in it wholeheartedly.
And because I've been through it, I can tell you that it's something that works and works really well when you go to a good clinic and you follow a good path.
So those are all lots of little things that kind of allow me to do this job and do it really well.
I also have unbelievable team of people that work with me.
People in our lab, our lab is regarded as one of the number one IVF labs in the country.
Where, like, what is the reason, if you could pinpoint one reason or a few reasons why people are having
so much, have so many more issues with fertility these days?
So for one thing, if you look back at our parents and our moms, people were having kids in their
early 20s.
Okay.
No one's having a kid in their early 20s anymore.
So a lot of those women, if they were waiting into their 30s, would have had difficulties
as well.
So for that reason, I think that it's really,
really important that you consider if you are not going to be having a kid in your 20s,
which is usually when people don't have difficulties, that you need to preserve fertility for the
future, meaning freezing your eggs, or if you're already in a relationship making embryos,
which combines the egg and the sperm together. So people have now begun to talk about it a lot.
It's not the major taboo. It's a smart thing. Someone freezes their eggs when they're 30 years old.
You're successful. You can afford it. You know how to get it. And you've done all the right things in your life.
And so people are not keeping it a secret and people are much more open.
Thank God to certain celebrities that talked about it a lot.
And we're very open about this.
It's been huge.
And I appreciate the fact that some of my patients were incredibly open and had a following
and had millions of people that were looking to see what happens to them.
And it opened a lot of doors for me as well, having them talk about it.
So I think in general, just the fact that they're talking about it is really helpful.
Secondly, people are waiting.
People are waiting and waiting and waiting and not realizing.
and ignoring. I have a patient that called me the other day. She did her consultation when she was
39. I didn't hear it for her for two years. She's like, okay, I think I'm ready. I had a lot of stuff
going on. So she came back at 41 now to freeze eggs. And I told her, I said, we're going to do the
best we can do, but I have no guarantees for you. This is because she was too late. It's not
that it's too late, but in two years between the age of 39 and 41, it's a huge difference in the
quality and quantity of eggs that you get from someone. Not so.
so much between 25 and 27, but 39 to 41, huge.
We've had a lot of conversations on this podcast, and I feel like there's no one better to ask
this question.
We're in L.A., right?
There's a lot of superficial reasons that people do things.
Is there a lot of superficial reasons that people are doing IVF?
For instance, can you say, I want a boy, I want this egg, I want the best egg, I want,
is there a list that you're seeing, or is that not a thing?
So it is a thing to an extent.
So we are able, by you doing IVF and doing genetic testing on your embryos, as a result of your genetic testing, I can reveal to you which ones were boys and which ones were girls.
And if you were lucky enough to make both genders, we're happy to put the gender you want back in you.
So if you said I wanted to put one girl back or two girls or want a boy and a girl, my wife and I picked a boy and a girl.
And we put a boy and a girl and they're both nine years old.
So you can pick that.
You cannot pick anything else.
So you can't get into like hair color, eye color.
We have a friend that says that she's going to pick her eye color, her hair color, her da-da-da-da-da.
That's not a thing.
It's not a thing.
Oh, she's maybe misinformed that.
I think, but listen, this is why I want to ask the question.
I think there's a lot of people that are misinformed.
The way I understand it is you basically are still like say that she froze an egg and we froze my sperm.
Like you're still kind of working with what, whoever, what your maker gave you.
Yeah, absolutely.
And there's no way to reveal.
There's no way to reveal eye color.
But there's some clinics that say there's things they can do. There's nowhere in the medical
literature that I've read. And our clinic is at the top of its game doing the most advanced
things in the world. None of those things are really possible. Okay. I think a lot of people
are just misinformed about this. Listen, I think everywhere gets competitive, but people think that they have a little
bit more choice. And so when you vet through this, like, who is an ideal candidate for something like
this? So there's different things that we do. If you are struggling and cannot get pregnant,
and it's been six months, a lot of studies say a year, if it's six,
months, I would see a doctor immediately. You are a candidate that needs to be seen by a fertility
specialist. If you are older, I don't even think you should wait six months. I think you should
first immediately talk to a doctor because if you're 37 and you want to have four kids,
if you have a kid and you deliver at 38 and next time you consider it, you're 40, well, guess what?
The chances of baby number two, three, and four are almost now zero. So if you did it at 37,
there's a good chance you could potentially make four beautiful embryos and give you that chance
of having your four kids, using those embryos from 37 when you're 44 for your fourth one.
Okay, so this may be another ignorant question, and my wife probably knows more about this,
but how long can a woman carry a child?
Like, so you have a great embryo?
It's a really good question.
Up until what age can you carry a child where the mother and child are protected?
The American Society of Reproductive Medicine says that you can put an embryo back into
someone up to the age of 55.
Now, if you have diabetes and high blood pressure and obesity,
and medical problems, I'm not putting a embryo back in you, even if you're 43.
So the general consensus, and I did have a patient that was 54 and in excellent health,
she worked until the day she delivered.
Wow.
And she did amazing.
I did try to encourage her not to carry the pregnancy because I don't think that's safe,
and I think there's a lot of other complications, and luckily none of those happened to her.
But in general, as long as you are healthy and you are aware of the risks that go along
with getting pregnant and at an older age, which are gestational diabetes, preterm delivery,
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For someone that doesn't know a lot about IVF, can you walk us through the entire process start
to finish? I hate needles more than anything. So give us all those kind of little details.
Absolutely. So my wife used to pass out from every blood draw and every needle she ever saw.
and after like the fourth day of the injections in her belly,
she called, I was rushing home to give it to her.
And she's like, don't come, I already did it.
So let's go through it and I'll explain to you why these needles are a little bit of,
there's something to be concerned about, but nothing to be concerned about.
Okay.
And what I mean is that the average IVF cycle, the average one,
starts by you calling us with your period on day one.
And then on day two or three, you come in for blood work and ultrasound.
And if everything looks good, you go down two paths.
The more common path is we put you on a birth control pill for about 10 days so that your cycle just stops.
Once the cycle has stopped and you're not ovulating on your own, we take over by teaching you how to administer injections for you.
They go into your belly. They're very, very tiny needles. If anyone's seen an insulin needle, they're similar to that.
I like to describe it as like a thick hair, like from your wrist curve one of those hairs. And that's basically how the whole needle is.
And they're like this big. You pinch and then you go right into your abdomen. And that's it. Or we see.
skip the birth control portion and you go right into injections. The injections usually last about
10 to 12 days. For our patients that cannot do it, you have a choice of coming to my office and the
nurses there will give it to you every day. Or you can just have one of our nurses go to your home.
There's unfortunately an extra fee for that, but many people do that. And it's usually about
four or five ultrasounds during those 10 to 12 days. You come in and we do an ultrasound vaginally
that looks at your ovaries and that we see these little eggs growing. They're called follicles.
and when they get to a certain size,
we know that the egg inside of that little bubble
is usually ready to come out.
And then we take you to our surgery center
when my anesthesia team gives you an IV.
And in the IV, they just put a little bit of medication
to relax you.
And once you're in the surgery room,
they give you a little bit more.
You just fall asleep
and you're totally breathing on your own.
It's a deep sedation.
And then the eggs come out
with a special needle going into the vaginal wall
with an ultrasound next to it.
And the eggs just get sucked out
through this hollow needle.
And they go into a test tube.
And then the test tube
goes to the lab and in the lab they're giving me a count one egg, two eggs, five eggs, 10, 15, 20,
and then we're done. How many eggs do people usually get? If you're healthy. I've had people make one egg.
I've had people make 50 eggs. So an average great response is probably something between 20 and 30.
That's a really good number. Why would someone do IVF if they can get pregnant on their own?
Is the only reason they would do it is to have a certain gender or are there other reasons?
Many reasons. Okay. So I have patients that come.
come to me and say, in my family, there's the BRCA cancer gene. And I want to make sure that
I'm a carrier and I want to make sure my kid never is a carrier. So we can do genetic testing
on an embryo that checks for certain disorders and diseases. So we get it out of your lineage
and you never pass it on. So that's one thing. The other thing is that there are other reasons.
Like let's say a couple, both of them carry cystic fibrosis. One out of 19 people are carriers
of cystic fibrosis, the most common as well for the Caucasian.
population, and if two people are together, they have a chance one and four of their kids will
actually have cystic fibrosis and not be a benign carrier with nothing their whole life.
So those are reasons people do that as well.
Let's say you just both finished law school and you're both 30 years old, and you know that
for the next 10 years you are going to be killing yourself on that partner path.
At 40, your chances of getting pregnant with your own eggs and everything working out perfectly,
get slim, but at 30 they're great.
So that's another reason why people will freeze their embryos, tuck them away,
When they're ready, they come back and use them.
If you have three girls and you want a boy, you can do this.
If you want the opposite, if you have three boys and you want that girl, you can do this.
I've had people tell me, I just want one kid and I want it to be a girl.
I don't judge.
I think that's perfectly fine.
Everyone has their heart set on things.
But there are a lot of reasons that people do this, a lot.
I think your comment earlier about this is L.A. and people are superficial.
This is a lot to do.
This is a little bit more than like just injecting a Botox or the things that the average L.A.
person does. This is a lot to do just for vanity. I do think that people that have come to me,
I've noticed that some people that have more of financial well-being, it's easier to make this
decision to move forward and make sure that things are tucked away. It is not cheap doing this whole
process. Well, I think this is also good to talk about to maybe remove some stimulus because
I think because there's been so many known people that have done this, they think, oh,
it's maybe a superficial thing to do, but maybe like all the issues you just highlighted are not
superficial reasons to do it. And so I think like removing some of that judgment and understanding
that there's more than just the reason that you want to grow a little.
or a boy, like some people want to do this for genetic reasons or they want to do this because
they're age and they're at risk. I had one follow-up question. Say that there's a couple, healthy couple,
they get pregnant easily on their own the first time, but then they're in that kind of cuss where
they're getting towards later in the 40s. Would you suggest to those people, hey, if you want to
keep having kids, it's good to freeze your eggs and do it this way? Or would you say keep going
naturally? I would never tell them to keep going naturally because it's going to close doors for them
down the line. And I think that some people have a hard time understanding why we recommend
to go straight to IVF and not try on your own, because if you get pregnant and the next time
you think about getting pregnant, you're looking at it about two years from then. So if you're 39, 40 years
old and there's a chance you could get pregnant on your own, you better think what you want down the line.
If there's more kids that you're waiting for, you better be very careful dealing with that now.
And do you have a better chance? I guess this may be something stupid too.
By the way, none of your questions?
Trying naturally? Or can say you're like, hey, I'm on the fence. I either want to go natural,
and do IVF, are you saying, listen, your chances are higher if you go IVF?
Amazing question, actually.
What do you two think if you were both 20 years old and we put you in a room together and you
had sex every single day of the month, what is the chance of you being pregnant at the end of that
month?
I would assume it's high.
Guess?
I don't know.
80%.
50%?
20 to 25%.
Wow.
The highest conception rate for human beings at their peak of perfection is 20 to 25% per month.
Okay. IVF success rates, IVF success rates you were way on, and I know you were just leading me into that, is in our clinic last year was between 76 and 84% per month. Sadly, that is not the case in the country. Like the average country success rate is, I think, was in the 30s. I think it's gotten into the 40% now.
So is there an age that people should start thinking about freezing their eggs, or is it not an age? Is it something that's situational per person?
Yes. Eggs and sperm. Let's not forget about that.
So I recommend because it's really been hard for us to get people in their 20s when their eggs are the best they are.
Because no one in their 20s thinks they're not going to have a mate and have a kid when they're 34 and everything's perfect in life.
If you have hit 30 and you don't have a significant other and someone that you are about to start the process of starting a family, then I think you should be freezing your eggs.
What if you have a partner?
So I have had people come to me at the age of 39 and say I was with someone for eight years and it just fell apart.
So I want people to address these things.
So if you have a partner but you're not ready to have kids, you have two choices,
if 100%, not 99.999, but 100% you're sure you're going to have kids with that person,
then make embryos.
You put the egg in the sperm together.
You make the embryos and they're there for you for the rest of your life.
So I just had a daughter a year ago.
You would say to us as a couple, if we want more kids, why not freeze your eggs?
Or make embryos.
I make embryos.
I make embryos.
I make embryos.
Excuse me.
If we're staying together.
You've got to be 100% though.
So if you are, I have had couples when the woman came in and froze eggs because they were
honest and said, you just never know what's going to happen.
And that tells me that they're probably not in the most solid relationship.
Yeah, like when I'm on my second or third husband, I need to be protected.
Exactly.
So I don't know how old you are.
Okay.
But if you've had one kid and you do want to have more kids, it's something to consider.
If you're still in your early 30s and you just want one more kid and like in a year you're
going to try again, I think you're good to go.
If you are in your late 30s and you're like, well, I want like maybe two, maybe three more,
I think you should think ahead.
So my age that I've come to the conclusion and I tell my patience is it's 30.
I have had patience.
I've had patients in their 20s that did it.
They just knew they are just about to start some kind of professional career and they're not going to be ready anytime soon.
So that's what they've done.
They've froze their eggs.
But men also have to worry.
So I've never gotten so many DMs on my social media or text to my phone.
asking me, do I need to freeze my eggs, make my embryos, or do something with my sperm because
of the COVID vaccine and the COVID situation? There's information out there that we are not sure
exactly if it's accurate or not that says it can affect fertility, it can affect sperm well-being.
So we've had people just freezing their, it can't hurt you. So people are freezing their eggs
and sperm faster than ever right now because they're not sure what the effect of the actual COVID
virus on them or the vaccine will be when it comes to their fertility.
I have a couple friends that have froze their eggs and they gained weight and they got very bloated.
Is that something that comes along with it? Do you see that all the time? Are there other side effects?
So they probably did well. So if you make two or three eggs, your ovaries go from the size of like two little walnuts to like an apricot and then the next week they go back to normal.
So they probably didn't make a lot of eggs. So when a woman's like two little walnuts become two grapefruits and they have like 10 eggs on this one and 10 on that one and your ovary get to,
this big. It's impossible that you're not going to feel bloated. Imagine we just took two,
you know, grapefruits and just squeeze that under your skin. You're going to feel bloated and you're
going to feel full. The weight gain is usually water retention from the ovary getting big and then usually
it just goes away. I have had patients that told me I just became a stress case and nervous as hell
and ate so much. I think that's why I gained 12 pounds in two weeks. So that can happen as well.
So I tell people, be cognizant of what you're eating. There's no reason you should be eating differently.
you should be eating healthy and watching what you eat and do all the normal things that you do.
But you do get bloated. It's almost impossible to do well doing this, not getting bloated,
retaining more fluid than normal. And then usually within two weeks, it's back to normal.
Maybe another ignorant question. Say you're a woman that fits your age range and you're going to go try to create eggs.
Once you do that, are your eggs, like say 30-year-old woman does this? Are there eggs limited moving forward?
Or can they still produce? Like, say, you have the eggs and that's like your insurance policy, but then you actually get pregnant.
it naturally is like, I guess what I'm saying, that's actually one of the major myths that I
answer for every patient on a consultation. Me, every month when you ovulate that one egg,
about a thousand, maybe even more, die off during the process. We are recruiting some of those
eggs that we were going to lose anyways during that process. And you're not going to be depleted
of your eggs. You are not going to go into menopause earlier. The next month, you can still
try on your own, and we have done nothing to your overall fertility status at all. Okay. I think that's,
like you said, that's a lot of fear that a lot of people have. It's like, once I do this, am I done in other
areas? But I have a question. How come I hear so much about the woman having all these issues when a lot of
the times it's the man? Is that something that we're not talking about enough? What's going on there?
No, we're not talking about it enough. So it's there. Okay. And I can tell you probably studies have shown
about 40% of infertility is female. And most recent studies showed about another.
20% is male. And unfortunately, the other 20% is really unknown. And we just like never figure out
why someone couldn't get pregnant. But for some reason, in the lab, we put the egg and the sperm
together and put it back into them and they get pregnant. So it's about equal men and female. It's about
man and woman. It's about 40% each. We don't talk a lot about the man issue of it because a lot of
men don't talk about it. Now women have come around. I think men will come around. We've had a big
push for male fertility freezing as well because you never know what's going to happen to you.
You never know if you're going to get, God forbid, cancer and need chemo.
And there's a lot of things can happen as well to a man.
So it's the safest thing to do.
When a man gives sperm, does he just go in a room and beat his meat to porn and just put the
sperm and just walk out?
Like, is that how easy it is?
Because that's frustrating.
If so.
Yeah, that's exactly what he does.
Thanks for the imagery.
Can you type that so we could put on our brochures, please?
We intentionally did not lock eyes during that question.
I just don't understand why everything.
I just haven't heard that vocabulary in a really long time.
Yeah, I don't know if that's a medical term.
We actually probably would request that they don't do that way because I don't know what it's going to lead to.
Does anyone ever say like a woman ever say, listen, I'm going to go in with the man and I'm just going to do it for him?
Or is it always just the guy in his hand?
Yeah, we've had people go in together.
Let me ask you this.
This may be even a more outlandish question.
I'm embarrassed to repeat the words you said to what was it again?
Beat your meat.
This might be an even more outlandish.
Every time you say beat the meat, we're just like looking away from each other.
Listen, she's, this might be even more outlandish.
But say you're a man and you want to go in and you want to give your best sample.
Like are there things men should do to prepare to provide the best sperm sample or does it not really matter?
Like you just roll out of bed and do it.
It doesn't really matter.
Okay.
So it's already.
So let's put it this way.
You are not going to have the most intense experience of your life in our little room with a chair and your phone.
We stopped doing that. We have TVs. I don't know. No one even uses them anymore. Everyone used to steal all of our DVDs.
By the end of the year, like our 1,000 DVDs were gone. So everyone uses their phones. And they do the best that they can do.
It doesn't really matter if you had like six milliliters of ejaculation versus two. It doesn't make a big difference.
And usually in our experience, in our lab, it doesn't provoke the best result.
Oh, I'm sure. But it's good enough because there are still millions and millions of sperm in there.
Because I know, like, a lot of guys, and I've talked to that, when they're trying naturally,
they're like, oh, I'm eating these foods or I'm working out. I'm doing they're trying to, like,
boost their testosterone and get, like, the best. But that's why I ask the question, like, does it really matter?
I think that in general, when someone is trying to conceive man and woman,
being as healthy as being as healthy as you can, like, you know, maybe that's not the time to be,
like, using pot every single night or smoking or drinking like a fish. These are the times where I
really believe that your overall health has a lot to do with how well you do. And it's so simple
to be on top of it and make yourself as healthy as possible for the few months before trying,
I think it's important. So the 600 margaritas that I drank when I got pregnant probably didn't
help a lot. There are many people that have been down that path. And you know what? It probably
didn't help you, but obviously it didn't hurt you as well. But for people that are going out of their
way to spend a ton of money and a lot of time and a lot of energy and a lot of emotional
power, I think it's probably best to be the safest and healthiest you can be to let
yourself know you're doing well. Let me ask one more question. I think so many people, they put,
like, when you're with your partner, you're saying, hey, we're trying for a child.
It's, I feel like there's this heavy pressure for everybody to kind of perform. And I,
and I wonder if sometimes that pressure is unhealthy in terms of fertility.
I hear that so often. And unfortunately, one of the sad things is that for men that are
in relationships where you're not a switch.
And when they're like, I'm ovulating, we have to have sex now. That's the number one time I've
heard from people that never had problems having sex ever. That when I was told I had to have sex
right at that moment, I just couldn't. Yeah. And I hear that all the time. That makes sense. It's like
it's not the biggest turn on, right? No. No, no, no. And I've told a lot of my female patients to,
maybe you don't need to announce and scream it like that and just like continue the way you normally
start to get into the mood. I'm a big believer on no pressure. Like I think if we,
were to try for another child, like, I wouldn't want to put a lot of pressure. I think that that makes
guys freeze up. What are some other tips and tricks, if there are any, to helping get pregnant
naturally? You know, I'm a firm believer. The more you do, the better. So it's so simple.
Like, if you want to check your fallopian tubes and make sure your tubes are open before you
try the whole year or two, I mean, why wait a year and then find out your tubes are blocked?
Wow, that's a really good tip. I'm licensed. I do them in the office. It takes under five minutes.
and you're done. If your tubes are open right then and there, and it's been shown that if your
tubes are open for the next three to four months because that highway was flushed clean,
there's a higher chance of pregnancy. A sperm analysis is the same. Like many men don't want to
deal with that, but it's so simple to go give sperm and make sure like, okay, my boys are good. I can
go. I can go and start. I've had people call me and tell me they tried for eight years to get
pregnant and then they come in and the guy has no sperm. And to me, as a physician and someone who's
organized in my life. Like, it's baffling someone would wait eight years. Like, what happened after the
first year? But there are people that are just not aware of all the things that can be done for them out
there. You seem like a very organized doctor, which I would like and I would appreciate. I read that you're
a proud supporter of the Family Equality Council, and this has helped tons of LGBT couples and individuals
build their families. Can you speak about that? Absolutely. So one of my favorite populations in my
practice are the LGBT. We have, it's not easy to start a family if you're gay or lesbian or transgender. And the
fact that they have to come to us to do what they're doing and the things that we can do really make it
special. Right now is before I came here, I was talking to, I have two females that are just lovely,
and they're making embryos, and one of them is going to carry the other person's embryo and she's
going to carry the other person. So talk about making it special. Wow. And we've had some of the
nicest gay couples in the world have been my patient.
and they support our practice and they do everything.
I'm a firm, firm believer of doing everything to help that population of patients be able to
have kids.
And we've done so much, so much in that population and has had such unbelievable outcomes.
It's a very proud feeling to know that to be able to help.
Is it true that if it's a same sex couple that you can pull from each couple,
or is that not true?
You cannot.
You cannot.
So you cannot put two sperm into one egg.
Okay.
But you can put one sperm into one egg and another sperm of the other guy into the other
egg, make two embryos, put them both back into one surrogate mother and see if she can carry
both and deliver both.
You're doing the Lord's work.
That's amazing.
This is a very rewarding job, I bet.
It is.
Yeah.
It is.
I have one more selfish question.
So this is obviously, as we've gone through this much, I don't want to say harder, but
it's more challenging on the woman than the man.
It seems like it's not, it wouldn't be a big deal for me to go and give a sample.
I just go in the room, do what Lauren says, and I'm fine. For men, as we're aging, if I'm 34 years
old right now, is there any downside in me going and doing a sample now in having it? Because it seems
like that's pretty easy to do. It's very easy to do. And I think the younger you do it, the better you are.
All studies have shown that when you, for men over the age of 40, all kinds of aneuploity or
abnormal chromosomes. And some minor links that we're not clear of about autism have all.
gone up after the age of 40, along with other issues as well. So for men, it's always smarter
to do it earlier and younger and it's easy and not that expensive. Yes, this is a much harder
process for women. So men, go beat your meat, go steal a DVD. It doesn't take that long. It's not
that hard. Where can everyone find you, pimp yourself out? Tell us your Instagram handle if they want
a book with you. Absolutely. Thank you so much. This was a lot of fun, by the way. I can't even
believe I could just blink and it ended.
Quick.
We could have talked a lot more.
I feel like, guys, I'm happy to come back.
So my Instagram handle is Dr. Shaheen Godir, and it's S-H-A-H-I-N-G-H-A-D-R.
I have a YouTube channel as well, which is fertility talk by Dr. Gadier.
My clinic has social media platforms as well, which is Southern California Reproductive Center.
We have a great website, and a new one is coming out real soon.
And we are SCR-C-I-V-F on Instagram as well.
That was so much information.
Thank you so much.
people are listening that I bet you got so much value out of this. Please come back for part two.
I would love to. I just wanted to add one more thing. We do every month one or two patient educational
events that are completely free. Anyone can enroll. Cool. If you do listen to it's about an hour,
hour, and 15 minutes, and there's question and answer. It's all done by Zoom. We used to do this
in a huge auditorium, and now we're like, this is great. People can do it from their home, and it's
so much easier for everyone. If you do participate in that, your consultation cost goes down to
like a third because those are people that we know are incredibly serious and paid attention
for a good hour. They deserve it. No, and I imagine the attendance of that has to have gone way up.
That sounds way better than having to show up to auditorium.
So it hasn't, it hasn't, but we used to do them once every month to six weeks.
So we used to fill our auditorium of about 100 people to the max and sometimes like seating
on the stairs. But now that we're doing like two a month, it's gotten to, it's basically about
the same thing. It's gotten to like about a third to a half every time. And it gives a better
opportunity for people to ask questions at the end, but people are still very, very interested.
We were the ones that started. Our clinic was the one that started the patient educational events,
and now every clinic in town does them. So I think it's good for patient care.
I 100%.
What a resource. Thank you for coming on. Please, please, please, though, come back for part two.
Thank you. I definitely will. Thank you so much. My pleasure.
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