
History and Purpose
The
American Society for Reproductive Medicine was founded by a small group of
fertility experts who met in Chicago in 1944.
Distinguished members of ASRM have led the development of the field
of reproductive medicine. They
were the first physicians to perform many of the standard procedures used
by fertility specialists today, including donor insemination and in vitro
fertilization; they have developed new approaches to contraception and
ovulation induction that are still in use; and they have helped form key
legislation and fought for reproductive rights when public policy in
reproductive matters did not exist.
Today,
ASRM members reside in all 50 of the United States and in over 100 other
countries. The Society is
multidisciplinary, with members including obstetrician/gynecologists,
urologists, reproductive endocrinologists, embryologists, mental health
professionals, internists, nurses, practice administrators, laboratory
technicians, pediatricians, research scientists, and veterinarians.
The ASRM has an administrative office in Birmingham, Alabama, and a
public affairs office in Washington, D.C.
Policy is set by an elected Board of Directors and implemented by
an Executive Director, an Associate Executive Director, and an
accomplished staff.
Since
1950, the ASRM has published Fertility and Sterility, a leading
peer-reviewed medical journal in obstetrics and gynecology.
Additionally, the Society produces two newsletters, ASRM News
and Menopausal Medicine.
Ethical concerns are published regularly by the Society's Ethics
Committee. To provide
assistance about diagnostic and therapeutic dilemmas, the ASRM Practice
Committee also produces timely reports in the form of guidelines, minimum
standards, committee opinions, and technical and educational bulletins. Also
published are the ASRM Patient Education Committee's Patient Information
Series booklets and Patient Fact Sheets, which are designed to help the
patient understand the complexities of reproductive disorders and their
treatment. In addition, ASRM
administers an awards' program designed to foster the development of
academic careers and research training.
Legislation
and public policy are addressed by the J. Benjamin Younger Office of Public Affairs, which
works to make the ASRM's views on reproductive medicine issues known on
both state and federal levels. To
date, the Society has been instrumental in supporting the establishment of
contraceptive and infertility research centers by the National Institutes
of Health and programs that support research in reproductive medicine such
as menopause and women's health. Working with both the media and the
public, the J. Benjamin Younger Office of Public Affairs has participated in several
educational outreach programs to promote better understanding on
reproductive issues and practices.
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Our programs
already go beyond infertility, and the range will
increase as the complexity and knowledge of
reproductive medicine increases.
--Leon Speroff, M.D.
ASRM President, 1991-1992 |
For more information
about the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (formerly The
American Fertility Society), please see:
FROM THE BEGINNING: A
History of the American Fertility Society 1944-1994.
Walter E. Duka, M.S. Alan H. DeCherney, M.D.
Published 1994, The American Fertility Society.
Available for $10.00 from the ASRM.
Please contact the
ASRM for purchasing information.
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