Restorative Reproductive Medicine Guides

In-depth guides to restorative reproductive medicine, written by board-certified physicians. Each guide covers the evidence, practical next steps, and what to expect.

What is Restorative Reproductive Medicine?

The diagnostic and treatment philosophy behind RRM. How cause-based care differs from suppressive medicine, and what to expect from an RRM-trained clinician.

NaProTechnology: A Clinician's Guide

NaProTechnology diagnoses and treats the underlying conditions driving infertility, menstrual disorders, and early pregnancy loss. This guide covers how the method works, published outcomes data, how to find a qualified provider, and what to expect on cost and insurance.

What is FEMM?

FEMM (Fertility Education and Medical Management) teaches women to monitor hormonal biomarkers and connects them with trained providers who diagnose and treat the underlying conditions driving their symptoms.

What is NeoFertility?

NeoFertility diagnoses and treats the underlying causes of infertility and recurrent miscarriage using cycle-based evaluation, immunological testing, and targeted treatment to restore natural conception.

RRM Glossary

A comprehensive, evidence-based reference for the terminology, methods, conditions, and procedures encountered within the Restorative Reproductive Medicine framework.

ART Registries and Codes of Practice

A global reference to national IVF registries (HFEA, RTAC, ANZARD, Q-IVF, CDC, DIR, JSOG, CARTR Plus, REDLARA, ESHRE EIM, ICMART) and the codes of practice that govern fertility clinics. What each measures, and what they miss.

PCOS Explained: Diagnosis, Phenotypes, and the RRM Approach

Polycystic ovary syndrome has four diagnostic phenotypes and distinct metabolic, reproductive, and mental health implications. How RRM-trained clinicians approach diagnosis and treatment differently.

Miscarriage and Recurrent Pregnancy Loss: A Clinician-Reviewed Guide

Miscarriage affects approximately 15% of clinically confirmed pregnancies. Recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL), defined as two or more clinical losses, affects 2 to 5% of couples. Most causes are diagnosable and treatable. This guide covers what the standard workup misses, what RRM-trained clinicians evaluate, and what outcomes look like after cause-based treatment.

RRM Success Rates: What the Published Evidence Shows

RRM live-birth rates across 14 peer-reviewed cohorts, 11 countries, 2008-2026. Crude and adjusted-cumulative outcomes with follow-up windows, by condition and age group.