Fertility Clinics in Sidcup

If you are considering fertility treatment because you have struggled to conceive or you or your partner are infertile, or if you are a same sex couple wanting to have a baby, there are a number of options available through the NHS and/or through private funding at fertility clinics in Sidcup.

If you would like to book a consultation (many clinics offer free initial consultations) to discuss your ferility treatment options at a clinic in Sidcup, contact the clinic direct. Treatment options include:


Please also contact us if you would like further information about egg donation/edd donors or sperm donation/sperm donors.

Fertility Clinics Sidcup

Queen Mary's Hospital

Fertility & Assisted Conception Unit
Women's Wing Queen Mary's Hospital
Frognal Road
Sidcup
Kent
UK
DA14 6LT
Tel: 0208 308 3043
The Queen Mary's Hospital in Sidcup is unique in that the town lies between Kent County and the London Boroughs of Bromley and Greenwich, a mere 11 miles from the central Charing Cross station, making the hospital uniquely accessible to Kent and London's Southeast. Sidcup retains a distinctly suburban aesthetic and is home to a wealth of detached and semi-detached houses sharing pars. The town's position meant that the Queen Mary's Hospital was able to service a very large and diverse population, hence the operation of a busy A&E unit in previous years. Since that emergency service was shut down, the hospital has focussed on the delivery of excellent care in many other departments, including fertility treatments, of which artificial insemination is a mainstay. Artificial insemination is provided to both NHS and private patients who meet criteria of age 9up to 44) and weight (maximum BMI of 35). The technique of insemination used is the globally successful and immensely popular IUI (intrauterine insemination), which has achieved great results at a fraction of the cost and hassle of other fertility treatments like IVF. The hospital also provides ovulation drug treatments, either as a treatment where it can benefit patients or as a method of encouraging and improving the chances of a successful IUI cycle. The hospital performs tubal surgery where necessary in the event of female factor infertility stemming from blockage or damage to the fallopian tubes, a part of the reproductive tract which links the ovaries to the womb.