How often a transfer results in live birth, scored from 1 to 100.
80
Top 49%
in the USA
Under 35 Birth Score
How often a transfer results in live birth for women under 35.
75
Top 61%
in the USA
Cycle Count Score
The volume of cycles performed, scored from 1 to 100.
89
Top 27%
in the USA
Egg Freezing Outcomes
Cryopreservation Score
How often a cycle successfully leads to eggs being frozen.
83
Top 43%
in the USA
Frozen Egg Birth Score
Live birth rate with donor frozen eggs, scored from 0 to 100.
69
Bottom 33%
in the USA
Frozen Embryo Score
Live birth rate with donor frozen embryos, scored from 0 to 100.
72
Bottom 33%
in the USA
Clinic Services
In Vitro Fertilization
Artificial Insemination
Sperm Donation
Egg Donation
Preimplantation Genetic Testing
Outside Monitoring
Mental Health
Male Couple
HIV Patients
Surrogacy
Female Couple
Embryo Freezing
Egg Freezing
Donor Embryo
Donor Egg
Medical Staff
No items found.
Practice Director
Yolanda Smith MD
Medical Director
Molly Moravek MD, MPH
Live Birth Rate, Patient's Own Eggs
Live births per transfer from one’s own eggs
The most common procedure at a fertility clinic, this reflects the portion of time that a transferred an embryo results in a live birth. Both IVF and egg freezing clients can be included here, so it’s not a perfect measure of success for either.
Age
Filter results by patient age.
All
X
In order to access granular data, create an account on Lilia.
University of Michigan Center for Reproductive Medicine
has a score in the
top 51%
of
Michigan
clinics.
It's important to note that
548
total cycles were for patients over 35.
4
of these cycles
were
for
women
over 42.
This puts
University of Michigan Center Fertility Clinic
in the
bottom 33%
of clinics by portion
of clients
over 42.
Looking at transfer volume,
University of Michigan Center for Reproductive Medicine
completed
a total of
781
transfers between
2016 and 2018.
This places them in the
top 25%
of clinics nationally for transfer volume.
Frozen Egg & Embryo Birth Rate
Live births per frozen egg or embryo transfer
This reflects the portion of time that either a frozen donor egg or embryo was transferred and resulted in a live birth. As donors tend to be young, this is often a useful proxy for egg freezers.
Age
Filter results by patient age.
All
X
In order to access granular data, create an account on Lilia.
Advanced Fertility Associates Medical Group’s live births per frozen donor transfer
This fertility clinic averages
3.3
births for every 10 frozen transfers.
Note, both
frozen eggs
and frozen embryos
are included.
This places
University of Michigan Center for Reproductive Medicine
in the
top 58%
of clinics
across the USA.
Across the state,
University of Michigan Center for Reproductive Medicine
has a frozen to live
birth rate in the
top 71%
of
Michigan
clinics.
Advanced Fertility Associates Medical Reviews
Reviewed:
October 4, 2020
Verified Patient
I would never advise anyone to choose treatment with the University of Michigan. My experience (and those of others I have spoken with) is that the lack of empathy for patients and staff's inability to communicate effectively or "connect" with patients will severely hamper your chance for success.
If you are hoping to be treated like a number, this is the clinic for you! I have been in fertility treatment for over 3 years and I can say with certainty that 2 years of that time was completely wasted by UM's set in stone protocols. We started with 4 high grade, genetically tested, quality day 5 blastocysts. After 3 failed transfers with those high grade embryos, we are now switching clinics. Communication with the nursing
It's tough to get in to see a RE and it can take a few months to get an appointment. Once you have a treatment plan in place, everything is smooth sailing!
One of the worst places to get fertility treatments. The staff treats you terribly and in a rush. They do not have any compassion and they brush you off.
The staff is caring and kind, but the clinic lacks proper follow-up. I was told my FET would have a 20% chance of success, and that my poor egg quality might be the problem. I don't know if they will ever know why, but would have hoped they ruled out other possibilities. Also, they implied I had no other options. I later found out I do have other options and continue treatment elsewhere.
The staff is caring and kind, but the clinic lacks proper follow-up. I was told my FET would have a 20% chance of success, and that my poor egg quality might be the problem. I don't know if they will ever know why, but would have hoped they ruled out other possibilities. Also, they implied I had no other options. I later found out I do have other options and continue treatment elsewhere.
One of the worst places to get fertility treatments. The staff treats you terribly and in a rush. They do not have any compassion and they brush you off.
If you are hoping to be treated like a number, this is the clinic for you! I have been in fertility treatment for over 3 years and I can say with certainty that 2 years of that time was completely wasted by UM's set in stone protocols. We started with 4 high grade, genetically tested, quality day 5 blastocysts. After 3 failed transfers with those high grade embryos, we are now switching clinics. Communication with the nursing