"It's very easy to demonize this dumb doctor who didn't do the right thing. That may not always be the case," said Dr. Nanette Santoro, obstetrics chief at the University of Colorado in Denver. "Frustrated people who don't get pregnant after a couple cycles will think more is better. It's the American way."
The new study examined trends over several decades and finds that the rate of triplet and higher-order births peaked in 1998 and has been declining since then.
From 1998 to 2011, the estimated proportion of twin births due to IVF increased from 10 percent to 17 percent, while the proportion of triplets-and-more declined.
During the same period, the estimated proportion of triplet and bigger multiple births from non-IVF treatments such as fertility drugs increased from 36 percent to 45 percent.
Dr. Fady Sharara of the Virginia Center for Reproductive Medicine in Virginia and an OB/GYN at George Washington University, said he urges couples to avoid multiple births, and to use one embryo at a time if they are doing IVF.
"There are medical, social, emotional and financial reasons to avoid having twins" or larger multiple births, he said.
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