Gifting joy to families
Thirsty test-tube babies in four and a
half years. Gynecologists Nayna Patel’s name induces immediate
awe and respect, not only in Kheda district but elsewhere in Gujarat,
India and often abroad too. It is her skill and dedication that
leads childless couples to the city of Anand, hoping for a miracle.
And not many go back disappointed.
Patel is a lady on a mission. She wants
to make the expensive medical technique of in-vitro-fertilization
affordable for the masses. This is the reason why she recently
set up a charitable trust exclusively for IVF.
“I started this infertility
clinic in Anand primarily because I would witnesses how one of my
close friends struggled from one IVF center to the other in the
metros shelling out a lot of money in traveling and expensive medication.
There is a big vacuum in Gujarat in this field,” says Patel,
who took a sabbatical from here practice to train with Mumbai’s
Faram Irani and later at the National University of Singapore, following
which she performed delivery of her first test-tube baby in May-2000.
“It gives you a tremendous sense of joy when couples who have
been married for more than 20 years finally conceive,” she
says. But it hasn’t been all that easy for Patel to operate
from Anand. “When I started Akansha clinic, I didn’t
have access to the kind of technology and medicines that are easily
available in bigger cities,” she says. Of course, now she
has over come these hurdles and has a state-of-the-art clinic with
the latest techniques in infertility. “There are several causes
for infertility. One must be open-minded enough to accept all possible
routes.” Patel recently convinced a 47 year old to play surrogate
mother to her daughter’s embryo. “The baby is due in
January,” she beams. Satisfaction
is the main stay of her profession. “They say it is a thankless
job because 70 percent of those who don’t succeed in conceiving
probably curse you, but one should count the blessings and smiles,”
says the lady whose motto is, “For those who dream there
is no such word as impossible’.
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