DuoFertility can help nearly all couples on their way to conception.
DuoFertility can be used by women with a range of medical conditions or circumstances. DuoFertility could be very useful in the following situations:
- Studies have shown that the best predictor of pregnancy is high frequency of intercourse when ovulation is most likely to occur.
Using BBT measurements to detect ovulation can help women to understand the variations in fertility during their cycle and identify their fertile period.
Some women who decide to use DuoFertility may not be infertile, but would simply like to speed up the process of having a baby.
- As DuoFertility takes all the necessary measurements for you, it is both easy to use, and will also provide you with much more accurate data than you would be able to capture yourself with manual measurements. This eliminates the inaccuracies caused by missing or mismeasuring a temperature measurement.
- If your hormone? levels are low, other ovulation detection kits which rely on urine samples and LH? test strips may not detect sufficient hormone levels to give an indication of ovulation.
DuoFertility, however, measures minute changes in body temperature, and is able to detect ovulation when hormone levels are low.
- Measuring BBT with DuoFertility can help to both build a picture of a woman’s typical cycle, and also monitor any differences between cycles.
This can contribute to the early diagnosis of fertility problems – the earlier the diagnosis, the greater the chance of successful treatment.
Certain cases of infertility stem from conditions which cannot be treated, and in these cases DuoFertility would not be able to help you conceive. However, DuoFertility can help identify these cases of infertility, as irregular hormone levels will be shown in the temperature charts.
DuoFertility was designed to adapt itself to your situation, your lifestyle and your cycle. To find out more about specific medical conditions and their implications for using DuoFertility, please click here.
Did you know...
About 15 percent of the general population will suffer from infertility. There are various reports and studies about which factors are the most common causes of fertility problems; these are generally split between female and male factors, and unexplained infertility.