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A Woman’s Most Precious Treasure – Her Eggs

The key reason why Lin Chi-ling was able to have a child at the advanced age of 47 lies in her early decision to freeze her eggs. Regardless of the method of conception, younger eggs are a critically important factor for fertility!

Fertility has a profound impact on a family. It influences the harmony between partners, the pressure of continuing the family lineage, and the complex dynamics among family members.

Today’s reproductive medicine has already developed many breakthrough methods to assist people with fertility challenges. However, without healthy, viable eggs, even the most advanced technologies are in vain.

Many women choose to freeze their eggs due to career planning considerations. This is a very wise decision that grants them reproductive autonomy, allowing them to focus on their careers and personal lives without worrying about fertility while pursuing their dreams.

Many corporations have joined the movement to support egg freezing for employees—for example, Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Uber, and Google—because employees are invaluable assets to a company.

In today’s society, late marriage and late childbirth have become irreversible trends. However, the biological functions of the human body do not change accordingly. The quality of eggs is closely tied to age. In the ever-advancing field of reproductive medicine, only by freezing eggs early can we separate “biological fertility age” from the “actual timing of childbirth.”

Companies that invest in nurturing successful female employees may face talent losses if those employees leave due to time pressure to have children. This causes not only resource depletion but also major operational challenges. That’s why more companies are starting to subsidize egg freezing, so women can retain autonomy in managing both career and fertility—without being constrained by time or age. The relationship between eggs and women mirrors that of employees and enterprises: taking good care of your eggs can have a profound impact on your future life, career, and family.

Today’s egg freezing technology does not change egg quality, but it does protect eggs from aging-related decline. With the advancement of reproductive science, it can even help prevent certain diseases. By simply taking a blood test to measure AMH (Anti-Müllerian Hormone), women can understand how many eggs are left in their ovarian reserve. Know yourself, know your eggs, and you can face the future with confidence!

In the future, egg research in reproductive medicine won’t just be about fertility. Eggs contain countless biological codes and offer infinite possibilities. That’s why preserving the most vital treasure of life—your eggs—is a mission that can no longer wait!

 

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