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cost of ivf in ubth

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IVF centres in Benin City including cost. Fertility Clinics in Benin City Nigeria…fertility hospitals in Benin city.

The following are the up-to-date list of government and private owned fertility clinics andivf centres in Benin, Edo state, Nigeria with their contacts to make reaching them easy.

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University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH) is the first of ivf centres in Benin

P.M.B 1111, Ugbowo Lagos Road, Benin-city.

Edo state, Nigeria.

Telephone: 08022160312; 08022535595

08065001008; 08153857887

Email: [email protected]

[email protected]

Website: http://www.ubth.org

Just like the ivf success rates, there is no guaranteed cost of ivf in UBTH or any other ivf centre in Nigeria. It depends on the number of tests, the obstetric history, and the age of the woman.The more, the tests carried out, the greater the age; the more the amount. Women with bad obstetric history like recurrent miscarriages will definitely pay more because they will undergo more fertility tests.

On my visit to the UBTH ivf centre on the 30th of January, 2023 to inquire about the cost of the procedure, the Consultant i met on call told me and i quote: ” Doctor, I cannot categorically tell you the cost of ivf here because the amount of money the patient will pay depends on her age, the number of tests she (and her husband) will do, and her previous obstetric history.

Older women or women that has either not been pregnant before or had been having recurrent miscarriages pay more since more tests will be carried out. I will personally advise any patient coming to UBTH for IVF to come with between #2.500,000 – 4.5 million NAIRA. The economic reality and dollar rates also affect IVF prices.”

I agree with you that the ubth ivf cost is quite expensive. This is because there is no special government subsidy or interventions for now to reduce the the cost burden of ivf treatment on childless couples. It is not only in the ubth ivf centre that affordability is a problem, it is like that in all fertility clinics across Nigeria and even in the world.

To check this cost burden many centres now do yearly ivf promo/price slashing/bonanza/discounts allowing couples more affordability and accessibility.

Learn more about these low/cheap ivf treatment in Nigeria here: ivf promo/ price slashing/discount/bonanza and centres that offer them.

St Augustine Medical Centre & Assisted Reproductive Delivery Technology Unit

Ugbowo, Benin City,

Edo state, Nigeria

Telephone: 08164124696

Chief Medical Director: Prof Augustine Orhue

Prof Orhue believes advance medical procedures can cure problem of infertility. In his words in 2013: “Some couple of months back, as the Head of the Department, we were able to carry out, at the University of Benin Teaching Hospital, (UBTH) the first IVF conception and delivery successfully through the aid of this technology,” the Professor of Medicine said. St Augustine Medical centre is one the foremost privately owned ivf centres in benin.

COST: #3,800,000 Naira

Graceland Medical Centre

2, Unuerokpa Street, off Technical Road,

Behind Discovery Group of Schools

Telephone: 08037271271

Chief Medical Director: Prof Micheal Emefiele Aziken

COST: #3.9 million Naira

Lily hospitals Limited

17, Edo-Osagie Street, GRA, Benin city

08113690592

One of the ivf centres in Benin that just started operation is Lily Hospital and it cost about #6,000,000 Naira per IVF cycle. Lily hospital do yearly IVF promo to reach couples that may have challenges with giving birth but cannot afford fertility treatments.

St Jude Women Clinic

Aigbedion Street, Use, Benin City

09080119446

Cost: #2.95 million Naira per cycle of IVF

Maviscope Hospital & Fertility Centre

5, Ewemade Street off Road by Agip Junction

Oka, Sapele Road, Benin City.

Have good success rates.

Was this article helpful? Do you have names, location and addresses of ivf centres in benin that are not here? Please let us discuss in the comments section.

COST: #2.6 million Naira

New IVF clinics have sprung up in Benin City with good results:

✓Shepherd Hospital and Fertility Centre Benin city

✓Divine Trinity Specialist Hospital and Fertility Centre

This article is the intellectual property of www.nimedhealth.com.ng

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Why you feel dizzy when you stand up

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Why you feel dizzy when you stand up?

A young, healthy patient asked me: “Doc, sometimes when I stand up from the bed too fast, my vision goes completely black for two seconds and I get dizzy. Am I having a mini-stroke?”

No, it is actually proof that your nervous system is working perfectly.

The exact neurovascular cascade behind why your vision blacks out when you stand up too fast and why you don’t actually pass out. 👇

• The Gravity Drop: When you are lying down, your heart pumps blood easily on a flat plane. The moment you stand up abruptly, gravity instantly pulls about 500 to 800 mL of your blood straight down into your legs.

Why you feel dizzy when you stand up
Why you feel dizzy when you stand up. Credit: Nurse Miriam

• The Transient Drain: This sudden pooling means less blood returns to your heart, which temporarily means less blood is pumped up to your head. For a split second, your brain experiences a drop in pressure.

• The Visual Blackout: The retina (the back of your eye) is incredibly sensitive to oxygen and pressure changes. When the blood pressure dips, the retina temporarily shuts down to conserve energy which is exactly why your vision goes black or static.

• The Baroreceptor Rescue: Luckily, you have pressure sensors (baroreceptors) in your neck. Within milliseconds, they detect the blood pressure drop and fire a panic signal to your brainstem.

• The Sympathetic Snap: Your autonomic nervous system instantly kicks in. It violently constricts the blood vessels in your legs and spikes your heart rate, physically squeezing the blood right back up to your brain. Vision restored.

Summary:

First time this happened to me I genuinely thought I was dying.
Turns out my body was just buffering.
Knowing the science changes everything

Here’s what’s actually happening:

When you stand up quickly, gravity pulls blood downward. Your body briefly has less blood reaching the brain. Your nervous system — specifically the baroreceptors –detects this drop and rapidly triggers your heart to beat faster and your blood vessels to constrict, restoring blood flow within seconds.
The momentary blackout and dizziness is just that brief gap before the correction kicks in.

👉Hi, I am Dr. Priyam. I break down complex medical science and advocate for Evidence-Based Medicine. FOLLOW ME for more clinical facts.

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Two A+ Parents, One O- Baby? The Blood Type “Scandal” That’s Actually Just Science

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can a+ and a+ give birth to o+ or O negative?

It’s a panic that lands in clinics and WhatsApp groups far too often: “Both of us are A positive… how is our child O negative? Did the lab mess up? Or is something else going on?”

The short, reassuring answer is no lab error, no mystery, and no betrayal. This outcome is completely possible under normal genetics. Here’s why the “math” actually maths perfectly once we look at what blood-type tests really reveal.

Your blood type is decided by two separate systems that most people only see the final phenotype of, not the hidden genes.
ABO system 🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸

can a+ and a+ give birth to o+
can a+ and a+ give birth to o+ or O negative?

Type A means you carry at least one A allele. You could be AA or AO. The O allele is recessive and invisible in your test result. If both you and your partner are AO (very common), each of you has a 50 % chance of passing the O allele. When both pass O, the child is blood group O. Roughly 45–50 % of people with type A are actually AO carriers, so this pairing happens every day.

Rh (positive/negative) system 🩸🩸🩸
“Positive” means you have the dominant D antigen. You can still be heterozygous Dd and carry the recessive d allele. If both parents are Dd, there is a 25 % chance the child inherits d from both and is Rh negative. About 15 % of people are Rh negative, which means a large portion of “positive” people quietly carry the d gene.

When both parents are A positive but heterozygous for both traits (AO and Dd), an O-negative child is not only possible — it is mathematically expected in a predictable percentage of pregnancies. The child simply received the two recessive alleles that were hiding in plain sight in both parents.
Blood-group reports show only what antigens are expressed on red cells. They do not sequence your DNA or tell you whether you are homozygous or heterozygous. That hidden information is what allows “impossible” combinations to appear regularly in perfectly ordinary families.

This is basic Mendelian inheritance, not infidelity or laboratory failure. The same recessive-gene logic explains blue-eyed children born to brown-eyed parents or curly-haired kids from straight-haired couples. It is science doing exactly what it is supposed to do.

If the result still feels unsettling, a simple conversation with your doctor or a genetics counsellor can walk you through your specific probabilities. In the overwhelming majority of cases, however, the only thing that needs updating is the outdated assumption that blood types behave like simple labels instead of the elegant, recessive-carrying system they actually are.

Your O-negative child is not evidence of a mistake. They are proof that genetics loves surprises — and that love (and science) are doing just fine.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Dr Parveen Yograj

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Why does BCG vaccine leave a scar?

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Why does BCG vaccine leave a scar?

That scar on your arm is a battlefield, and the chemistry of how it forms is completely different from any other vaccine you’ve ever received.

Most vaccines inject dead or weakened pathogens into your muscle. Your immune system sees the threat, builds antibodies, done. No lasting damage to the tissue. The BCG tuberculosis vaccine does something radically different. It injects live Mycobacterium bovis bacteria directly into the top layer of your skin, the dermis, and then lets them multiply.

Why does BCG vaccine leave a scar?
Why does BCG vaccine leave a scar?

For the first six weeks, those bacteria are actively replicating at the injection site. Your immune system detects them and sends macrophages to engulf the invaders. T-cells get recruited to the area. Then something happens that no other routine vaccine triggers: your body builds granulomas. Those are organized clusters of immune cells that physically wall off the bacteria like a biological quarantine zone. The immune system can’t fully kill every bacterium, so it builds a containment structure around them instead.

That containment war destroys tissue. The granulomas break down the dermis. A blister forms, then an open ulcer that weeps for weeks. The entire process from injection to final scar takes about three months. What you’re left with is the structural aftermath of your immune system demolishing a section of its own skin to contain a live bacterial colony.

The wild part: 4 billion doses administered since 1921. 100 million newborns receive it every year. And the size of your scar correlates with how strong your immune response was. Studies in West Africa found that infants who developed a visible scar had half the mortality rate of infants who didn’t. Not just from TB. From everything. The scar tissue itself became a marker that your immune system trained correctly.

That circular mark is the one vaccine scar that actually means something went right. Your body fought a live infection in a controlled space, won, and left the evidence on your skin for life.

Aakash Gupta

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