The client was a Shenzhen single man who had recently obtained U.S. citizenship but did not meet the residence-time comfort level he expected for a child born abroad. He considered the United States because of document concerns, but the budget was several times higher than Georgia. He also preferred an Asian / Chinese-background egg donor to avoid an obvious mixed-ethnicity appearance.
Shenzhen single father
From identity concern to recurrent-loss review and Georgia birth documents.

A project shaped by identity concern, donor preference and recurrent pregnancy loss.
AVORELIS Action Log
- Coordinated review of citizenship, residence history and Georgia birth-document objectives.
- Reviewed file structure with local counsel and document teams before country selection.
- Helped the client understand Asian / Chinese-background donor-resource profile structures.
- Paused mechanical transfers after three pregnancy losses around 12 weeks to three months.
- Organized embryo records, carrier checks, medication, prenatal results and loss-management records.
- Coordinated genetic review and rebuilt embryo / pregnancy strategy.
- Prepared Georgia birth documents and exit arrangements early so post-birth documents could proceed without avoidable delay.
What this case shows
A single-father project cannot be judged only by country, cost or donor resources. Nationality records, residence history, donor preference, genetic risk, carrier arrangement and post-birth documents may all affect the 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.
