"The letter arrived on a Tuesday. 'Your referral has been accepted. Current waiting time: approximately 18 months.' I read it three times. Eighteen months. I'd be nearly 40 by the time we even started. That was the moment James looked at me and said, 'We're not waiting.'"
This is Emma and James's story — a journey from a Manchester suburb to a fertility clinic in Shenzhen, driven by the refusal to let a waiting list determine their future as parents. As told to the FertiJourney Medical Team.
The Letter
Emma and James had been trying to conceive for three years. They'd gone through every step the NHS required: GP consultations, initial testing, referral to a specialist, more testing. Unexplained infertility was the diagnosis — a frustrating label that essentially meant "we can't find anything wrong, but you're still not pregnant."
"Unexplained infertility sounds like it should be reassuring," Emma says. "It's not. It means there's no clear problem to fix. You're just... stuck."
After completing all the prerequisite testing, their NHS consultant submitted the IVF referral. And then came the wait.
"The letter was polite but devastating. 'Due to high demand in your clinical commissioning group, the current waiting time for NHS-funded IVF is approximately 18 months.' Eighteen months. I couldn't believe it. I called my GP, thinking there must be a mistake. There wasn't."
The Clock Was Ticking
For Emma, age was the factor that made waiting impossible. At 38, every month mattered. The NHS guidelines in her area offered one funded IVF cycle for women under 40 — but the wait meant she'd be pushing against that limit.
"James and I sat at the kitchen table and did the math. Best case: I'd start treatment at 39 or 40. Worst case: by the time we got to the top of the list, I'd age out of eligibility entirely. It felt like the system was designed for us to fail."
They looked into private IVF in the UK. The quotes made them gasp.
The Private UK Option — What They Found
- Single IVF cycle (private UK): £5,000–£8,000 for basic, £8,000–£12,000 with ICSI
- With PGT-A: Add £3,000–£4,000
- Medications: £1,500–£2,500 per cycle
- Estimated total for one complete cycle: £12,000–£18,000
- Multiple cycles often needed: Could easily reach £35,000–£39,000
- Wait time: 4–8 weeks to start (faster than NHS, but still not immediate)
"We could have afforded one cycle privately. Maybe two if we remortgaged the house. But what if it didn't work? We'd be broke and still childless. The financial risk was terrifying."
Finding FertiJourney
James, an IT consultant, approached the problem methodically. "I made a spreadsheet," he says, almost apologetically. "Countries, clinics, success rates, costs, travel requirements. Spain, Greece, Czech Republic, Cyprus — all the usual European options. But the costs were still high, and the travel logistics were complicated."
Then Emma found FertiJourney through a Reddit thread about medical tourism.
"I was on r/IVF at 2 AM, as you do when you can't sleep and you're obsessing over fertility," Emma says. "Someone mentioned traveling to China for treatment. I almost scrolled past it. China? For IVF? It sounded extreme."
But the numbers in the comment stopped her. "The person said they'd spent less than £10,000 total — including flights, accommodation, and treatment. I woke James up. 'Look at this,' I said. He looked at the screen, then at me, and said, 'That can't be right.'"
The Skepticism Phase
James was skeptical. Emma was cautiously hopeful. They spent the next two weeks in what Emma calls "the skepticism phase" — trying to find the catch.
"I think we both assumed there had to be a catch," James admits. "The clinic would be run-down. The doctors wouldn't speak English. The technology would be outdated. The success rates would be inflated. Every assumption we had about Chinese healthcare was... well, wrong."
They started with FertiJourney's website, then requested a free information pack. "It was incredibly detailed. Success rates broken down by age group. Photos of the lab. Bios of the doctors with their publications and international training. Accreditation certificates. It was more transparent than anything we'd seen from UK clinics."
Researching Luohu Hospital
Emma took the lead on the medical research. She looked up Dr. Chen and the other physicians at Luohu Hospital's Reproductive Medicine Center. She found their publications on PubMed. She checked the hospital's accreditations.
"The doctors had trained internationally — some in the US, some in Europe. The lab used the same equipment I'd seen in videos of top UK clinics. The success rates for women my age were actually higher than the UK national average. I kept waiting to find the problem, and I couldn't."
James focused on the practical side. "Flights from Manchester to Shenzhen: about £600 each. Visas: straightforward for UK citizens, especially with a medical invitation letter. Accommodation: FertiJourney offered apartments starting at £350 per week. I added it all up. Even with two trips — one for egg retrieval, one for transfer — we'd spend less than a single private cycle in the UK."
Making the Decision
The turning point came during a video call with a FertiJourney coordinator. "Her name was Wei. She was based in Shenzhen, spoke fluent English with a slight Manchester accent — she'd done her master's at the University of Manchester. That tiny connection made everything feel real."
Wei walked them through every step: what medical records to bring, how the visa process worked, what to expect at the first consultation, where they'd stay, how the interpreter service worked, even which grocery stores near the apartment stocked British food.
"After that call, James and I looked at each other and just... knew. We were doing this."
"I kept thinking about the NHS letter sitting on our kitchen counter. 'Approximately 18 months.' That letter was going to decide whether we became parents. I decided it wasn't."
3 Weeks from Contact to Treatment
This was the timeline that still amazes Emma:
"Three weeks. From 'what if' to 'we're doing this.' In the NHS system, we wouldn't even have received a confirmation letter in three weeks."
The Treatment Experience
Emma and James arrived in Shenzhen in early November. The weather was warm — a welcome change from Manchester's gray autumn. FertiJourney's driver met them at the airport with a sign, and within an hour they were settled into their apartment.
"The apartment was lovely. Modern, clean, two bedrooms, a proper kitchen. We could see the hospital from our window — literally a five-minute walk. I could go for my morning blood test and be back before James finished his coffee."
The Stimulation Protocol
Emma's protocol was a standard antagonist cycle, but with a key difference: daily monitoring during the critical phase.
"In the UK, whether NHS or private, you might get scanned twice during the whole stimulation. At Luohu, I had blood work and ultrasound every 48 hours — and during the final days, every day. Dr. Chen explained that this fine-tuning was the difference between retrieving 8 eggs and 12 eggs. She was right."
Emma's interpreter, Mei, became more than a translator. "She was like a sister. She'd text me in the evening to check how I was feeling. She explained everything — not just the words, but the context. When the doctor mentioned something about my lining being 'trilaminar,' Mei explained why that mattered for implantation. I understood my own treatment better in China than I ever did in the UK."
Egg Retrieval: The Numbers
After 12 days of stimulation, Emma had 14 follicles measuring 18–22mm. The trigger shot was administered at precisely 9:30 PM. 36 hours later, she was in the procedure room.
"The retrieval itself was fine. Light sedation — I was out for maybe 20 minutes. When I woke up, James was there, and Mei was holding a piece of paper. 'Eleven eggs,' she said. I started crying. Happy crying, for once."
The fertilization report the next morning: 9 of 11 fertilized via ICSI. The day 5 blastocyst report: 5 embryos. PGT-A results: 3 euploid — two boys and one girl.
"Three healthy embryos. After years of 'unexplained infertility,' we had three chances to become parents. James cried. I'd never seen him cry before."
The Frozen Embryo Transfer
Emma returned to Manchester to let her body recover. Three months later, they flew back to Shenzhen for the frozen embryo transfer. "We chose to transfer one boy embryo. No particular reason — we just felt ready."
The FET protocol was simple: estrogen pills to build her lining, progesterone suppositories, and a single ultrasound to confirm the lining was ready. "It was so much easier than the stimulation cycle. I felt like myself the whole time."
The transfer took 15 minutes. "I watched on the ultrasound screen as the catheter delivered the embryo. Dr. Chen pointed to a tiny white dot on the screen. 'There he is,' she said. 'That's your embryo.' I still get chills thinking about it."
The Result
The two-week wait in Shenzhen was filled with distractions: day trips to Hong Kong, walks through Lianhuashan Park, and an ill-advised attempt to learn Mahjong from their interpreter. "We were terrible at it," James laughs. "But it passed the time."
On the morning of the beta test, Emma couldn't eat breakfast. "I'd had so many negative pregnancy tests over the years. My brain couldn't imagine a positive one."
Mei called at 1:30 PM. "She said, 'Emma, your beta is 612.' I said, 'Is that good?' She said, 'That's very good. You're pregnant.' I dropped the phone. James picked it up and Mei had to repeat everything."
The ultrasound two weeks later showed a strong heartbeat at 138 bpm. "I recorded the sound on my phone. I still listen to it sometimes."
Their son was born in August 2025, a healthy 7 pounds 8 ounces. They named him Leo.
Cost Comparison: The Bottom Line
| Expense | UK Private (£) | Shenzhen via FertiJourney (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Clinic Fees & Monitoring | £7,500 | £3,900 |
| Medications | £2,000 | £1,200 |
| Egg Retrieval + ICSI | £3,000 | Included |
| PGT-A (3 embryos) | £3,200 | £1,500 |
| Embryo Freezing (1 year) | £800 | £400 |
| FET Cycle | £3,500 | £1,700 |
| Flights (2 round trips × 2 people) | N/A | £2,400 |
| Accommodation (7 weeks total) | N/A | £2,800 |
| FertiJourney Coordination | N/A | £1,100 |
| Interpreter Services | N/A | £550 |
| Total (one complete cycle) | £20,000 | £15,550 |
Compared to potential £39,000 for multiple private UK cycles: Savings of £23,450+ — with a successful pregnancy on the first attempt.
"And here's the thing," Emma adds, "if the NHS had been able to see us immediately, it would have been free. But 'free' doesn't help when the wait is 18 months and you're 38. We paid for speed, and speed was what we needed."
Emma & James's Advice to Other Couples
- Don't let geography limit your options. "The best clinic for you might not be in your country. We had to unlearn the assumption that 'local' equals 'best.'"
- Do the research — it will ease your fears. "Every fear we had about going to China dissolved once we started looking at actual data. The technology, the doctors, the success rates — it was all world-class."
- FertiJourney handles everything. "From the visa invitation letter to the apartment to the interpreter — we didn't have to figure out anything on our own. That was worth every penny."
- The interpreter is your lifeline. "Mei wasn't just translating words. She was explaining medical concepts, helping us navigate the city, even teaching us how to use Chinese apps. She was essential."
- Make it an experience, not just a medical trip. "We explored Shenzhen, took the train to Hong Kong, ate incredible food. It stopped feeling like a desperate medical journey and started feeling like an adventure we were on together."
Emma looks at Leo, now several months old, sleeping in his cot. "The NHS letter is still somewhere in our house. I kept it. Not out of anger — out of gratitude. If they'd given us an appointment in 6 months, we probably would have taken it. We'd probably still be waiting for our second cycle. Instead, we have our son."
They still have two euploid embryos frozen at Luohu Hospital. "We're not done yet," James says with a smile. "Leo needs a sibling."