Surrogacy India - Congratulation to Adela and Rex is a girl!! Dream do come through with Weecare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Saturday, December 1, 2012
Surrogacy India - Congratulation to David is a twin
Surrogacy India - Congratulation to David is a twin!! Dream do come through with Weecare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
Surrogacy India - Congratulation Anna and Eric
Surrogacy India - Congratulation Anna and Eric - Newborn baby twin boys! Dream do come through with Weecare Surrogacy USA http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
Surrogacy India
Surrogacy India - Congratulation to Ryan and Eric - Newborn baby twin boys! Dream do come through with Weecare Surrogacy USA http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/

Sunday, October 28, 2012
Australians head overseas for surrogacy
AUSTRALIANS are increasingly turning to surrogacy arrangements in India to fulfil their desire to have children, new research shows.
Hundreds of Australians are choosing India as their destination for commercial surrogacy, followed by Thailand and the United States, rather than opt for a legal arrangement in Australia which bans compensating surrogates.
Research by Surrogacy Australia, an Australian agency involved in international surrogacy, found there were 200 recorded surrogacy births in India to Australian couples so far this year, compared to 179 in 2011, 86 in 2010 and 47 in 2009.
The research included Australian government statistics, data collected from 14 large overseas surrogacy agencies and a survey of 217 Australians.
READ MORE...
Surrogacy India - Positively WeeCare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Hundreds of Australians are choosing India as their destination for commercial surrogacy, followed by Thailand and the United States, rather than opt for a legal arrangement in Australia which bans compensating surrogates.
Research by Surrogacy Australia, an Australian agency involved in international surrogacy, found there were 200 recorded surrogacy births in India to Australian couples so far this year, compared to 179 in 2011, 86 in 2010 and 47 in 2009.
The research included Australian government statistics, data collected from 14 large overseas surrogacy agencies and a survey of 217 Australians.
READ MORE...
Surrogacy India - Positively WeeCare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Fair-skinned Indian women paid £1,000 more to be surrogates than others
Fair-skinned high caste women are being paid £1,000 more to be surrogate mothers
than their dark-skinned, low-caste rivals, an Indian study has found.

India has become a medical tourism
destination for fertility treatment and surrogacy among both childless Western
and Indian couples from around the world.
But according to researchers surrogate mothers still face discrimination over
their caste, skin colour and attractiveness despite the fact that the foetus
they carry has none of their own genetic material.
Read more...
Surrogacy India - Positively WeeCare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Read more...
Surrogacy India - Positively WeeCare Surrogacy http://
Monday, October 22, 2012
Commercial surrogacy grows in India
They never wanted to have a child, until they did. And then they couldn't.
For four years, this San Carlos couple struggled with infertility. Now, their child is growing inside a woman they have never met, in India, a country they have never seen.
This is the story of Jennifer Benito-Kowalski, 39, and Steve Kowalski, 40, who are trying to start a family 8,200 miles from the Bay Area.
It is also the story of a developing nation where hundreds of women, for a price, are opening their wombs to fulfill the dreams of aspiring parents around the world.
Commercial surrogacy became legal in India a decade ago in an effort to stimulate medical tourism, the emerging practice of travel across international borders to obtain cheaper health care. The Confederation of Indian Industry estimates the market will generate $2.3 billion this year.

Read more: .....
Positively Weecare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
For four years, this San Carlos couple struggled with infertility. Now, their child is growing inside a woman they have never met, in India, a country they have never seen.
This is the story of Jennifer Benito-Kowalski, 39, and Steve Kowalski, 40, who are trying to start a family 8,200 miles from the Bay Area.
It is also the story of a developing nation where hundreds of women, for a price, are opening their wombs to fulfill the dreams of aspiring parents around the world.
Commercial surrogacy became legal in India a decade ago in an effort to stimulate medical tourism, the emerging practice of travel across international borders to obtain cheaper health care. The Confederation of Indian Industry estimates the market will generate $2.3 billion this year.
Read more: .....
Positively Weecare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Thursday, October 18, 2012
Origins of Love: the reality and ethics of reproductive tourism
Assisted reproductive technology has grown significantly in Australia as in other countries and hundreds of thousands of children have now been born because of it around the world. Most of us know people who’ve had children this way.
But there’s another side to assisted reproduction with which Australians are less familiar. You may know that it’s often difficult for infertile couples to find suitable egg donors if a woman cannot produce her own eggs or if her eggs are not able to be fertilised.
And it’s even harder for couples to find a surrogate mother if they can’t have a child themselves, or they want to have a child who is biologically related to both of them (especially as payments and other rewards have been prohibited in Australia).
You may have heard of “reproductive tourism”, where people travel to another country to undertake procedures that Australian women may be unwilling to undertake, or that would be unlawful in Australia. But most of us know little about the experiences of people in those countries who are drawn into these activities.

Read more...
Positively Weecare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
But there’s another side to assisted reproduction with which Australians are less familiar. You may know that it’s often difficult for infertile couples to find suitable egg donors if a woman cannot produce her own eggs or if her eggs are not able to be fertilised.
And it’s even harder for couples to find a surrogate mother if they can’t have a child themselves, or they want to have a child who is biologically related to both of them (especially as payments and other rewards have been prohibited in Australia).
You may have heard of “reproductive tourism”, where people travel to another country to undertake procedures that Australian women may be unwilling to undertake, or that would be unlawful in Australia. But most of us know little about the experiences of people in those countries who are drawn into these activities.

Read more...
Positively Weecare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
How much would YOU pay to be a mother?
On Saturday, the Daily Mail told the story of a British couple who spent £20,000 having a baby using an Indian surrogate. It revealed the lengths some couples will go to for a child and the huge costs they face. So what is the price of having a baby? Here, three women reveal how much they spent to have their children.
Read more:.....
Surrogacy in India - Positively WeeCare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Read more:.....
Surrogacy in India - Positively WeeCare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Friday, August 31, 2012
Our 'rent a womb' child from an Indian
A couple tell today how they are expecting a child by a surrogate mother from an Indian ‘baby factory’.
Octavia and Dominic Orchard travelled to the Hyderabad clinic to get around a UK ban on commercial surrogacy. Their baby – due at the end of the year – will be theirs biologically while being born to an impoverished Indian ‘renting out’ her womb.
Mrs Orchard, a middle-class Oxfordshire housewife, admitted the £20,000 deal sounded ‘cold and clinical’ but insisted: ‘This is a business transaction.’
Describing the surrogate mother as ‘just a vessel’, the 34-year-old former estate agent added: ‘There is no altruism involved on the surrogate’s part: she is being paid to have our baby’.
At A clinic in Hyderabad, southern India, a surrogate mother is carrying Octavia and Dominic Orchard’s second child. The couple, who are as English as their bucolic-sounding name, know only the sparest of details about the woman who is pregnant with their baby.
Read more....
For Surrogacy service with Weecare Surrogacy USA http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Octavia and Dominic Orchard travelled to the Hyderabad clinic to get around a UK ban on commercial surrogacy. Their baby – due at the end of the year – will be theirs biologically while being born to an impoverished Indian ‘renting out’ her womb.
Mrs Orchard, a middle-class Oxfordshire housewife, admitted the £20,000 deal sounded ‘cold and clinical’ but insisted: ‘This is a business transaction.’
Describing the surrogate mother as ‘just a vessel’, the 34-year-old former estate agent added: ‘There is no altruism involved on the surrogate’s part: she is being paid to have our baby’.
At A clinic in Hyderabad, southern India, a surrogate mother is carrying Octavia and Dominic Orchard’s second child. The couple, who are as English as their bucolic-sounding name, know only the sparest of details about the woman who is pregnant with their baby.
Read more....
For Surrogacy service with Weecare Surrogacy USA http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Surrogacy a booming business in India -
After two miscarriages and six unsuccessful rounds of fertility treatments, Adela Ramirez Fryhover would do anything to have a baby, including hiring someone else to carry it for her.
"I want to become a mother so bad," says Fryhover, an American who moved from Miami to Delhi for her husband’s job with Nokia, the phone company. "The ultimate goal (in life) is to have a child, to experience motherhood."
The desire consumes her. Fryhover says she thinks about it all the time: "This is what you wake up to, and this is what you go to sleep with."
She’s hoping Wyzax Surrogacy Consultants, part of a relatively new but booming commercial surrogacy industry in India, will help.
Read more ...
For Surrogacy service with Weecare surrogacy USA
Saturday, August 4, 2012
Rent-a-womb turning into multi-million industry - Surrogacy In India!
New Delhi: Even as most people feel that the best and the most fun way to make a baby is inside a bedroom, more and more are seeking awareness of exploring “other ways” to procreate. And with women increasingly choosing to marry late, there is a definite growth in reasons that fuel surrogacy as the “popular other way”.
It is a medically proven fact that the best child-bearing ages for both men and women are in their late 20s and early 30s. With age, the ovulation process starts to slow down. For many couples who get married in their later years, surrogacy is one of the best options in case they fail to conceive naturally.
“
These days professional agencies help you understand the concept of surrogacy in no time. Indeed the agencies are quite helpful as they educate you on both legal and medical aspects of surrogacy
Read more Surrogacy India
For Surrogacy Services - Weecare Surrogacy USA
Read more Surrogacy India
For Surrogacy Services - Weecare Surrogacy USA
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Surrogacy In Mumbai India by Weecare Partners USA
Surrogacy India For Less - 40% to 70% Less Than US Program. We are an American owned Co and is based in Michigan U.S.A. http://www.WeeCareSurrogacy.com
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
The Newest Wave in Outsourcing to India: Surrogate Pregnancies - Weecare Surrogacy USA
When Josh, a 29-year-old who works in academic publishing, and Matt, a 32-year-old pharmaceutical rep, got married in November 2011, they knew they wouldn’t be having kids the traditional way (obviously).
But having a family was important to them, and they were eager to get the ball rolling. They were so sure they wanted to be fathers that they preemptively moved from a one-bedroom Manhattan apartment to a two-bedroom space in Queens.
After researching different options and what they cost, the couple decided to go with Indian surrogacy.
What’s that, you say?
Indian surrogacy is when an Indian woman acts as the surrogate mom for a couple by carrying a fertilized egg from a separate egg donor (Matt will provide the dad’s genetic material in this situation). Sometimes the surrogate moms use their own eggs, and in other cases doctors have been known to fly Caucasian egg donors to India.
Read More...
For Surrogacy Service in India .....
But having a family was important to them, and they were eager to get the ball rolling. They were so sure they wanted to be fathers that they preemptively moved from a one-bedroom Manhattan apartment to a two-bedroom space in Queens.
After researching different options and what they cost, the couple decided to go with Indian surrogacy.
What’s that, you say?
Indian surrogacy is when an Indian woman acts as the surrogate mom for a couple by carrying a fertilized egg from a separate egg donor (Matt will provide the dad’s genetic material in this situation). Sometimes the surrogate moms use their own eggs, and in other cases doctors have been known to fly Caucasian egg donors to India.
Read More...
For Surrogacy Service in India .....
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Failed IVF attempt tied to depression, anxiety Via @ Weecare Surrogacy USA
Women who are stressed and anxious before in vitro fertilization (IVF) are no less likely to have a baby, new research suggests. But if the treatment fails, it may take a toll on their mental health.
In two separate studies in the journal Fertility and Sterility, researchers found women with anxiety or depression symptoms were just as likely as others to become pregnant.
One study focused on women undergoing IVF and the other followed women trying to conceive naturally.
Read more..
For Surrogacy Service
In two separate studies in the journal Fertility and Sterility, researchers found women with anxiety or depression symptoms were just as likely as others to become pregnant.
One study focused on women undergoing IVF and the other followed women trying to conceive naturally.
Read more..
For Surrogacy Service
Monday, June 4, 2012
Hundreds pay for overseas surrogacy
AUSTRALIAN couples are paying huge amounts to overseas surrogates to fulfil their dreams of having a family, some risking jail in doing so, fuelling calls for surrogacy laws in Australia to be overhauled.
New figures indicate the number of Australian couples travelling overseas - to India, the United States, Thailand and Canada - to have children through surrogacy has tripled in three years. Most of the couples enter commercial surrogacy deals - typically worth between $50,000 and $150,000 - that would be illegal in Australia.
According to Surrogacy Australia, a Melbourne-based advocacy group for parents using surrogacy, a survey of 14 surrogacy agencies overseas this year found the number of babies born on behalf of Australians jumped from 97 in 2009 to 269 last year. Already, 254 Australian surrogate babies have been born this year, the group says.
For Surrogacy Service please contact Weecare Surragacy USA
Read more: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/opinion/political-news/hundreds-pay-for-overseas-surrogacy-20120602-1zp1u.html#ixzz1wpMpSRLJ
New figures indicate the number of Australian couples travelling overseas - to India, the United States, Thailand and Canada - to have children through surrogacy has tripled in three years. Most of the couples enter commercial surrogacy deals - typically worth between $50,000 and $150,000 - that would be illegal in Australia.
According to Surrogacy Australia, a Melbourne-based advocacy group for parents using surrogacy, a survey of 14 surrogacy agencies overseas this year found the number of babies born on behalf of Australians jumped from 97 in 2009 to 269 last year. Already, 254 Australian surrogate babies have been born this year, the group says.
For Surrogacy Service please contact Weecare Surragacy USA
Read more: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/opinion/political-news/hundreds-pay-for-overseas-surrogacy-20120602-1zp1u.html#ixzz1wpMpSRLJ
Thursday, May 31, 2012
A baby made in India: a couple's dream comes true
Robyn and Jason Wright are learning the dusty streets of their son's birthplace, where spluttering rickshaws weave around abandoned cows with bright painted faces, piles of trash smoldering on the sidewalk.
This is Anand, half a world away from their American home, where amid all the chaos, passersby strain to catch a glimpse of the tiny bundle Robyn is cradling in her arms.
Baby Jake Wright, seven weeks old and weighing just four pounds is the baby they thought they would never have, as Robyn was unable to carry a child after a hysterectomy.
“We’d written it off, thought we’d never have kids,” Robyn told us. “Someone had mentioned doing surrogacy in India. I thought they were crazy.”
Crazy as it seemed, the Wrights flew from their home in Wyoming to the Akanksha Infertility Clinic here in Anand: the reproductive tourist hub for an international baby boom. They supplied the egg and sperm for baby Jake and he was carried in the womb of an Indian surrogate mother called Usha, who gave birth to him in December.
Read more...http://todayhealth.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/05/28/11883566-a-baby-made-in-india-a-couples-dream-comes-true?lite
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Surrogacy in India
Surrogacy is a booming business in India with women carrying the biological child of paying clients, who are largely from America.
This article on the growing trend highlights one American couple who spent $25,000 to have an Indian woman carry and deliver their biological child. The woman was paid $7,000 for her services and was housed in a clinic during her pregnancy where her health and nutrition were monitored.
I’ve heard of this system before, but the most interesting part of the article for me was the comment section. Some readers questioned why American parents would go to such lengths to “keep their genes” when there are children who need adoptive parents. Others argued the adoption system in America is too expensive and cumbersome. Some people said the surrogate should get a bigger cut of the money, and others raged about population control.
I find it funny that people get so riled up about the way other people choose to grow their families.
My husband and I considered surrogacy after we were told not to have more children because of my health. A dear friend of ours actually offered to carry a baby for us. We seriously considered this, but in the end decided we felt more comfortable with adoption. I don’t think surrogacy is wrong, just not right for me. I would rather find a baby that needs a home than go to such lengths to create one. Of course, I have been lucky enough to have two children already.
For Surrogacy Service
Read more...http://just4mom.blogs.deseretnews.com/2012/05/29/surrogacy-in-india/
This article on the growing trend highlights one American couple who spent $25,000 to have an Indian woman carry and deliver their biological child. The woman was paid $7,000 for her services and was housed in a clinic during her pregnancy where her health and nutrition were monitored.
I’ve heard of this system before, but the most interesting part of the article for me was the comment section. Some readers questioned why American parents would go to such lengths to “keep their genes” when there are children who need adoptive parents. Others argued the adoption system in America is too expensive and cumbersome. Some people said the surrogate should get a bigger cut of the money, and others raged about population control.
I find it funny that people get so riled up about the way other people choose to grow their families.
My husband and I considered surrogacy after we were told not to have more children because of my health. A dear friend of ours actually offered to carry a baby for us. We seriously considered this, but in the end decided we felt more comfortable with adoption. I don’t think surrogacy is wrong, just not right for me. I would rather find a baby that needs a home than go to such lengths to create one. Of course, I have been lucky enough to have two children already.
For Surrogacy Service
Read more...http://just4mom.blogs.deseretnews.com/2012/05/29/surrogacy-in-india/
Saturday, May 12, 2012
Becoming a mom against the odds
NEW YORK (WABC) -- Mother's Day is always particularly sweet for one woman.
Not long ago she and her husband were facing major infertility problems.
But thanks to an innovative technique and a little bit of luck, her dream of being a mom is now reality.
Little Kenley is celebrating her first birthday as she defied the odds just by being born. Her conception was a challenge her parents say they never expected.
"It's easier to take when it's just happening to you versus preventing her from having what she's wanted her entire life as well," said Jason Schiraldi, with Cleveland Clinic.
Kenley's mom Jen had trouble producing eggs and her dad Jason was unable to produce enough sperm.
So to try in-vitro fertilization, doctors at the Cleveland Clinic first surgically removed testicular tissue from Jason to look for sperm. In most cases, thousands of viable sperm can be found this way, but after 9 hours of searching, Jason only had one.
"We were able to find this one lone sperm that we were able to freeze, all by its lonesome," said Dr. Nina Desai.
Read more.....http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/story?section=news/health&id=8658270
Not long ago she and her husband were facing major infertility problems.
But thanks to an innovative technique and a little bit of luck, her dream of being a mom is now reality.
Related Content
"It's easier to take when it's just happening to you versus preventing her from having what she's wanted her entire life as well," said Jason Schiraldi, with Cleveland Clinic.
Kenley's mom Jen had trouble producing eggs and her dad Jason was unable to produce enough sperm.
So to try in-vitro fertilization, doctors at the Cleveland Clinic first surgically removed testicular tissue from Jason to look for sperm. In most cases, thousands of viable sperm can be found this way, but after 9 hours of searching, Jason only had one.
"We were able to find this one lone sperm that we were able to freeze, all by its lonesome," said Dr. Nina Desai.
Read more.....http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/story?section=news/health&id=8658270
Thursday, May 10, 2012
Surrogacy In India
About Us
Fourth Generation
WeeCare Partners USA LLC (WCPU) was founded by Victor Hui Wee of Kalamazoo, Michigan.
Like many WCPU clients, Victor and his wife Mary had always wanted children, but ran into more obstacles that they were prepared for, particularly when it came to their desire to raise a newborn. Whether it was local or international adoption, they were always faced with the same problems: too much red tape, too expensive, or too much competition. Things became more dire when laws about international adoption tightened, all but excluding a couple of their ages. IVF treatments also proved fruitless, leaving the couple with disappointment and $45,000 in medical bills. For a time, they gave up hope of ever achieving their dream. Mary completed her doctorate and Victor expanded his already successful businesses. But it wasn't long before that familiar longing returned and a chance flip of the remote changed their lives.Surrogacy, international or otherwise, had never occurred to Mary and Victor, because they had spent so much time on adoption and medical procedures, but an episode of The Oprah Winfrey Show on international surrogacy opened their eyes to the possibility that they really could have a child of their own. After much research and struggle, the couple decided to go it on their own and work with Yashoda Infertility & Healthcare Services, a choice they are elated to have made, for they are now the proud parents of a beautiful boy, Connor.
A Happy Ending
Though it has a happy ending, to call Victor and Mary's experience traumatic is an understatement. From exorbitant agency costs for any kind of assistance to paperwork requirements they'd never heard of after Connor was born, they have been through the gauntlet of Indian surrogacy and realized that they didn't want anyone else to suffer through the frustrations, pain, and fear they had to endure. Thus WeeCare Partners was born.Taking his knowledge about all the things, great and small, that can go wrong in the process, Victor made multiple trips to India to study the surrogacy process, the legal system, medical centers, and the American Embassy's requirements following birth. Partnering with the best medical and legal professionals, he has dedicated himself to helping families like his navigate the international surrogacy process, so that others can bring their babies into the world with a spirit of joy and relaxation.
http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
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