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Partners to Parenthood (PtP) is an intelligent guide to every path to family-building — IVF, donors, surrogacy, adoption. Your way, your journey.

Why PtP exists
About one-third of couples in which the woman is over 35 have fertility problems ( HHS Office on Women's Health ). Today's fragmented fertility ecosystem results in higher costs, further delays, and poor health outcomes.
PtP solves this by connecting the entire support network around one person's journey — starting with clinics, expanding to allied healthcare providers, with the objective to align incentives across the healthcare system, employers, insurers, and government.
Starting with fertility therapy and awareness to prevent further delays that decrease your chances of success
Enabling access to trustworthy, privacy-preserving and inclusive guidance for all — regardless of path or background
Making confident and informed decisions on every step of their journey towards parenthood
How it works
Sarah (42) came to PtP after 3 failed IVF cycles. Here's how her journey unfolded.
Month 1
Sarah finds PtP. After 3 failed IVF cycles, Sarah is emotionally drained, yet she is still searching for a viable solution to become a parent. She is indecisive but is considering a domestic adoption.
Months 2-4
A 4th IVF cycle begins with deeper clinical and emotional support. The cycle is successful, but the journey takes an unexpected turn. PtP supports Sarah and her partner through it — helping them process what happened and map next steps without navigating it alone.
Month 5
As Sarah approaches 43, IVF success rates decline. PtP helps her understand the clinical reality and introduces donor egg as a viable next step. She and her partner carefully weigh the emotional, medical, and financial implications while deciding whether to proceed.
Months 7-11
PtP coordinates the full donor egg cycle — clinic scheduling, donor coordination, and medical protocols. Sarah and her partner receive continuous updates and support throughout the process, ensuring clarity and emotional grounding.

Month 12
Embryo transfer is successful. PtP continues to coordinate early pregnancy monitoring and care pathways, ensuring seamless clinical support and follow-up for Sarah and her partner.
What we stand for
The foundational principles that guide our mission and shape your journey with us.
We recognize the emotional weight of infertility and family-building decisions, and we design every interaction with empathy and respect.
We help patients and providers organize complex information into clearer next steps, care preparation, and pathway visibility.
We connect the moving parts of the journey — medical history, labs, treatment planning, benefits, emotional wellbeing, and family-building partners.
We believe sensitive reproductive and family-building information should be shared only with clear permission, purpose, and boundaries.
We are building PtP with privacy-by-design, responsible data practices, and a commitment to never sell personal information.
FAQ
Everything you need to know before getting started. Still have questions? We're here.
PtP is designed to help people facing infertility, reproductive health challenges, or complex family-building decisions feel more organized, informed, and supported. You can use PtP to help prepare for care, understand what information may be needed, track where you are in your journey, and coordinate next steps across medical and non-medical pathways. PtP may support journeys related to infertility evaluation, treatment planning, IUI, IVF, fertility preservation, donor options, surrogacy, adoption exploration, emotional wellbeing, benefits and cost visibility, and provider coordination. PtP does not replace your doctor, clinic, therapist, attorney, or financial advisor. It helps you organize the journey and prepare for conversations with the right professionals.
Many patients arrive at a clinic overwhelmed, unsure what records matter, or uncertain what questions to ask. PtP helps you organize key information before your visit, including medical history, reproductive history, menstrual cycle history, prior fertility testing, prior treatment history, medications and supplements, family-building goals, emotional wellbeing context, insurance and benefits information, and questions you want to ask your provider. This may help you feel more prepared and may help your care team better understand your situation before the appointment.
Yes. PtP is designed to help patients organize information that may be relevant to infertility evaluation, diagnosis, and treatment planning. This may include prior lab results, hormone testing, ultrasound findings, semen analysis information, prior diagnoses, prior procedures, genetic testing information, treatment attempts and outcomes, doctor recommendations, and next steps to discuss with your care team. PtP does not diagnose infertility or recommend medical treatment on its own. Clinical decisions remain with licensed healthcare professionals.
Family-building journeys are often not linear. You may move between testing, treatment, waiting periods, referrals, financial decisions, emotional support, and alternative pathways. PtP helps organize what has already happened, what information is still missing, what appointments or documents may be needed, what questions to ask next, what options may be relevant to discuss, what tasks are still open, and what steps may come later. The goal is to help you see the journey more clearly instead of carrying everything in your head.
Yes. PtP is designed to support multiple family-building pathways, including infertility diagnosis and treatment planning, IUI, IVF, fertility preservation, donor egg pathways, donor sperm pathways, donor embryo pathways, gestational carrier/surrogacy journeys, LGBTQ+ family-building, single intended parent journeys, and adoption exploration. Not every pathway will apply to every person. PtP helps organize relevant information so you can discuss options with the appropriate medical, legal, financial, and support professionals.
Infertility and family-building journeys can involve uncertainty, stress, grief, financial pressure, relationship strain, and emotional exhaustion. PtP is designed to support emotional wellbeing through optional tools such as gentle emotional check-ins, mood tracking, stress and anxiety questionnaires, guided journaling, milestone reflections, meditation and calming resources, music and art-based wellness resources, and optional community support features. These tools are supportive and educational. They are not a substitute for therapy, crisis care, or mental health treatment. With your consent, selected emotional wellbeing trends may be shared with your care team to help them better understand your support needs.
No. Emotional wellbeing information should be shared only with your permission. PtP is designed around consent-aware sharing. That means you should be able to choose what information is shared, who can see it, and for what purpose, depending on the platform configuration and applicable laws. You remain in control of sensitive personal information.
Yes. PtP is designed to improve visibility into financial decision points during infertility and family-building care. PtP may help you organize information related to insurance coverage, fertility benefits, medication coverage, prior authorization steps, estimated out-of-pocket costs, uncovered services, donor, surrogacy, or adoption-related cost categories, and financial planning questions. Cost information is intended to improve clarity and preparation. It does not replace formal financial counseling, payer confirmation, clinic billing guidance, or legal/financial advice.
PtP is designed to help patients connect with relevant medical and non-medical support across the family-building journey. This may include fertility clinics, reproductive endocrinologists, OB/GYNs, urologists or male fertility specialists, genetic counselors, mental health professionals, fertility nurses or care coordinators, benefits navigators, financial planning partners, reproductive health attorneys, surrogacy partners, adoption-related organizations, and donor-related services. Provider availability may depend on geography, licensing, partnerships, and platform stage.
No. PtP does not replace your doctor, clinic, therapist, attorney, or financial advisor. Your clinic and licensed healthcare professionals remain responsible for medical diagnosis, treatment recommendations, prescriptions, procedures, and clinical decisions. PtP supports organization, preparation, coordination, education, journey visibility, emotional wellbeing support, benefits and cost awareness, and communication between steps.
No. PtP does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. PtP may help you organize your information, understand what questions to ask, and prepare for conversations with licensed professionals. Any medical decisions should be made with your healthcare provider.
Depending on your journey and consent choices, PtP may ask about basic profile information, medical history, reproductive history, cycle history, prior fertility testing, prior treatments, medications, lab results, family-building goals, emotional wellbeing, insurance and benefits, care team information, documents or records, and preferences and values. You should only share information you are comfortable sharing and that is relevant to your care journey.
PtP is designed with a minimum-necessary data approach. That means PtP aims to store only the information needed to support your journey and avoid unnecessary duplication of sensitive health information. Depending on the deployment model, PtP may store limited structured information such as user inputs, pathway progress, consent records, task status, care journey state, and audit history. When connected to external systems, PtP is designed to retrieve relevant information with consent rather than becoming the primary repository for your complete medical record.
PtP is designed with privacy, consent, and security principles in mind. This includes consent-aware information sharing, role-based access controls, secure data exchange, auditability of access and workflow actions, minimum-necessary data principles, preparation for HIPAA-aligned workflows, and a commitment not to sell personal information. PtP is preparing for clinical pilot environments and is not currently making certification claims such as HIPAA compliance or SOC 2 certification unless and until those requirements are formally completed.
No. PtP does not sell personal information. Sensitive reproductive, emotional wellbeing, and family-building information should be handled with care, consent, and clear purpose.
PtP's AI is designed to support organization and coordination, not replace professional judgment. AI-supported features may help summarize intake information, organize medical and reproductive history, identify missing information, suggest possible next-step questions, structure journey pathways, support benefits and cost visibility, provide patient-facing educational guidance, and help care teams review information more efficiently. PtP does not make autonomous medical decisions, diagnose conditions, or replace licensed professionals.
Yes. PtP is designed for infertility and family-building journeys broadly, not only IVF. You may use PtP if you are trying to understand fertility options, preparing for infertility evaluation, exploring diagnosis and treatment, considering IUI, considering IVF, preserving fertility, exploring donor options, considering surrogacy, considering adoption, supporting a partner, or trying to understand emotional, financial, or care coordination needs.
PtP is designed to support individuals, couples, partners, and intended parents. Depending on the platform configuration, you may be able to invite a partner or share selected parts of your journey. Consent and privacy controls should guide what information is shared.
Yes. PtP is designed to include male fertility and partner-related information where relevant. This may include semen analysis information, prior reproductive history, urology referrals, lifestyle and health context, genetic testing information, and treatment planning considerations. PtP helps organize information so patients and providers can discuss it more clearly.
Yes. PtP is designed to support diverse family-building pathways, including LGBTQ+ intended parents. This may include donor pathways, gestational carrier journeys, legal coordination, benefits navigation, emotional wellbeing support, and care coordination across medical and non-medical partners.
Yes. PtP may support adoption exploration by helping organize information, tasks, partner referrals, documents, timelines, and non-medical family-building steps. Adoption processes vary by state, country, agency, and family situation. PtP does not replace licensed adoption agencies or legal professionals.
PtP is for people who want more clarity, coordination, and support while navigating infertility or family-building decisions. This may include individuals facing infertility, couples preparing for fertility care, people considering treatment options, intended parents using donor pathways, intended parents considering surrogacy, people exploring adoption, LGBTQ+ intended parents, and single intended parents.
Join as a patient seeking support, or as a provider ready to transform care.