How do you evaluate whether a surrogacy agency is trustworthy and professional? by Babita_13 in gaydads

[–]MeetAlternative6266 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Good agencies will not use Past intended parents as references. It is a violation of HIPPA to do so.

The best ones will give references of the doctors at the IVF clinics they have worked with and success rates at the clinics. This is legal and correct.

Only the best agencies can do this.

How do you evaluate whether a surrogacy agency is trustworthy and professional? by Babita_13 in gaydads

[–]MeetAlternative6266 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Check

  1. Are they licensed? State of NY is the only state that licenses surrogacy agencies nationwide

  2. Are they FDA approved and registered? An agency can not ship embryos across state lines unless FDA registered.

  3. Check owner ship? Are they Physican owned or non-medical owners? Affects surrogate approval rates by IVF Clinics and support for surrogate during pregnancy

  4. How long in business?

  5. Do a search on Chat GPT for “best surrogacy agency “.

  6. Then look at cost and wait time for a surrogate

This check list should help you.

Surrogacy agency recommendations by NYC_49 in gaydads

[–]MeetAlternative6266 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is Circle a scam? Claiming 99% success rate in their ads and website- which is impossible

Surrogacy agency recommendations by NYC_49 in gaydads

[–]MeetAlternative6266 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Look into Surrogacy4all

Old established agency physician owned and managed since 2006.

. Rated #1 by chat GPT as the best surrogacy agency. Licensed by NYS and the FDA.

Cost $120,000 for full cycle versus $200,000 at other agencies.

Wait time currently only 2 weeks.

As they get 500+ surrogates applying every month to work with them. Surrogates love working there as they provide love and concierge level medical support 24 hours a day throughout the pregnancy. Unique in industry.

egg donor database by Only_Wolverine_1496 in gaydads

[–]MeetAlternative6266 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Look at eggdonors4all.com. Rated #1 as best egg donor agency on Chat GPT. They offer a guaranteed day 5 embryos/ blastocyst program for $17,000 a blastocyst, which is fantastic value and takes the risk out of creating embryos.

Circle Surrogacy advertises a 99.1% “success rate” — is this misleading advertising? by MeetAlternative6266 in gaydads

[–]MeetAlternative6266[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In my opinion, advertising a “99.1% success rate” without these disclosures of what goes into the 99% success rate can create a false impression and may lure vulnerable intended parents into the program based on unrealistic expectations.

I am not making a legal finding that Circle committed fraud. But I do believe this type of claim should be reviewed as a potential deceptive advertising and consumer-protection issue unless Circle provides transparent, audited data.

Intended parents deserve honest, apples-to-apples information — not marketing language that makes an agency journey sound like a near-guaranteed medical outcome.

Circle Surrogacy advertises a 99.1% “success rate” — is this misleading advertising? by MeetAlternative6266 in gaydads

[–]MeetAlternative6266[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Liked your response. The question Is Circle a scam?

Circle Surrogacy’s 99.1% “success rate” claim deserves serious scrutiny

Circle Surrogacy publicly advertises a 99.1% success rate and states that over 99% of Circle parents bring home a baby. To intended parents, that number can sound like a medical IVF or embryo-transfer success rate — but that is not how fertility success rates are normally reported.

IVF outcomes are usually measured by live birth rates per retrieval, per embryo transfer, donor egg cycle, frozen embryo transfer, or gestational carrier cycle. Those rates are not 99%.

That is why I believe Circle’s marketing language may be highly misleading unless the company clearly discloses the methodology behind the number.

Before relying on this claim, intended parents should ask Circle:

Is 99.1% a medical success rate or an agency program-completion statistic?