This Beijing remarried couple had both entered a later stage of life. After rebuilding a family together, they wanted a shared child. They had gone through multiple IVF attempts without a stable result. The husband preferred donor eggs to reduce the wife’s physical and emotional burden; the wife wanted one bounded opportunity to try with her own eggs before moving to a donor-egg plan.
Beijing remarried couple
Self-egg attempt, medical support and donor-egg backup.

A remarried couple wanted one child they could call their own together.
AVORELIS Action Log
- Organized prior IVF records, ovarian-reserve indicators and doctor opinions.
- Separated the decision into medical feasibility, physical burden, time boundary and backup plan.
- Coordinated a two-attempt self-egg plan with regenerative-support discussion under physician evaluation.
- Kept donor-egg arrangement as a defined backup rather than an open-ended emotional debate.
- Helped the client review results after the first attempt and prepare the second attempt.
What this case shows
For advanced-maternal-age couples, the question is not simply persistence or giving up. It is whether medical evaluation, emotional acceptance, time boundary and backup arrangement can be discussed in the same project structure.
This anonymized project file is used to illustrate client-side coordination and project management. Medical decisions should be made by physicians and medical teams; legal and document matters should be reviewed by qualified counsel and relevant authorities. Outcomes vary by client situation.
A first meeting is not a sales close.
The first conversation is used to clarify family structure, medical information, donor or carrier needs, budget boundaries and post-birth objectives before any country or program is recommended.
