Infertility Doesn’t Always Mean IVF: Why Dr. Swati Shree Believes Every Couple Deserves Answers Before Treatment
Every fertility journey begins differently. For some, pregnancy happens sooner than expected. For others, months slowly turn into years, bringing countless questions, silent disappointments, and the...
Every fertility journey begins differently. For some, pregnancy happens sooner than expected. For others, months slowly turn into years, bringing countless questions, silent disappointments, and the emotional weight of waiting.
It is a journey that Dr. Swati Shree, Founder of Eve Women & Fertility Clinic, has witnessed closely throughout her years in reproductive medicine. She has met couples carrying thick folders of investigation reports, prescriptions, and treatment histories. Some have already undergone multiple fertility procedures, while others arrive after months of trying naturally. Yet despite their different stories, one question almost always remains the same.
“Doctor, will we ever have a baby?”
For Dr. Swati, that question deserves much more than a quick answer.
Instead of immediately discussing IVF or other treatments, she begins with a conversation. She explains how pregnancy happens naturally—not as a complicated medical process, but as a remarkable sequence of events where the brain, hormones, ovaries, fallopian tubes, uterus, and sperm all work together in harmony. Even a small interruption at one stage can make conception difficult.
“When couples understand what is happening inside their own bodies, infertility becomes less frightening,” says Dr. Swati. “Only after identifying where the process is being interrupted can we decide which treatment is truly appropriate.”
This philosophy has shaped every consultation at Eve Women & Fertility Clinic in Bengaluru, where the focus is on understanding the cause of infertility before recommending a treatment plan.
According to Dr. Swati, infertility is much more than a medical diagnosis. It is the monthly cycle of hope followed by heartbreak. It is avoiding conversations at family gatherings, wondering why everyone else seems to be moving ahead while your own dreams remain uncertain. It is also the emotional and financial burden of navigating investigations, medications, and conflicting advice.
One of the biggest misconceptions she encounters is the belief that infertility automatically means IVF.
While IVF has transformed reproductive medicine and helped millions of couples become parents, Dr. Swati believes it should never be viewed as the starting point for everyone. Fertility treatment is not about choosing the most advanced option first; it is about choosing the right option for each individual couple.
For some couples, the answer may lie in correcting thyroid disorders, treating PCOS, improving sperm health, identifying the fertile window more accurately, or addressing nutritional deficiencies. Others may benefit from ovulation induction or intrauterine insemination (IUI). And for many, IVF remains the most appropriate treatment. The key, she believes, is ensuring that every recommendation is based on an accurate diagnosis and a personalized evaluation rather than routine practice.
This belief is shaped not only by years of medical training but also by Dr. Swati’s own journey.
During her postgraduate years, she underwent an AMH test simply to understand whether she could safely postpone pregnancy until after completing her studies. The report suggested a lower ovarian reserve than expected, and fertility treatment was advised. Rather than making immediate decisions based on a single investigation, she chose to understand her body’s natural ovulation signs, plan conception carefully, and conceived naturally.
The experience reinforced a lesson that Dr. Swati now shares with every patient—that investigations are invaluable, but they are only one part of the story. Patients deserve interpretation, context, reassurance, and honest guidance before any treatment decisions are made.
Over the years, this approach has also helped couples who arrived after repeated unsuccessful fertility treatments, including multiple IVF cycles. Instead of immediately recommending another cycle, Dr. Swati often goes back to the basics—reviewing previous records, reassessing both partners, correcting overlooked deficiencies, and individualizing treatment. While every fertility journey is unique and outcomes can never be guaranteed, she has seen several couples conceive through simpler treatment approaches after a fresh evaluation. These experiences continue to strengthen the philosophy on which Eve Women & Fertility Clinic was founded.
For Dr. Swati, success is not measured by the number of IVF cycles performed but by ensuring that every couple receives the treatment they truly need. Whether that journey leads to lifestyle modification, medication, IUI, or IVF, her belief remains unchanged: every couple deserves to be heard before they are treated.
Because infertility doesn’t always mean IVF. Sometimes, it simply means finding the right answers before choosing the right treatment.





