The answer could be a pared-down system that can fit inside a shoebox and uses cheap ingredients you might find in a kitchen cupboard. In the past infertility has been neglected in developing countries, partly because of a focus on controlling overpopulation. But experts argue that true reproductive health has to address both sides: family planning for those who want to avoid pregnancy, and fertility treatment for those who long to have children but can't conceive naturally.
Nosiphiwo, from South Africa, had been trying to conceive for years when her husband's family asked her for their lobola back - the bride price they paid when she married their son. She was ostracized by her in-laws for being childless, and felt cut her off from the rest of her community to She says women in her situation sometimes turn to suicide.
"I thought of doing that. Because you don't have any option."
The prohibitive costs of fertility treatment mean that worldwide, most couples cannot afford it - though their desperation can be such that many become destitute trying to pay for it, selling property or going into debt. One of the biggest obstacles is the cost of the complex, sophisticated labs where "in vitro" egg fertilization takes place.
"They would wait shyly around the corner and ask if there was anything we could do for them."
Back then, the heartbreaking answer was no. But he has campaigned ever since to improve global access to infertility care, co-founding The Walking Egg non-profit organization to raise awareness of fertility in developing countries.
Van Blerkom revived a technique he used in the 1980s when transporting cow embryos long distances across Nebraska. By mixing baking soda and citric acid he created his own CO2 periodically adding it to the solution holding the embryos to maintain the optimal CO2 concentration and alkalinity levels.
For humans the technique had to be refined to create a closed system and thus minimize any risk of contamination.
"It has been shown to work in a developed country. Now we've got to see how well it is reproduced in the developing world where the conditions are more fickle."
The trials are due to be rolled out in South Africa and the UK later this year, and the team hope that by early next year the system can be tested in the kind of low-resource settings it was designed for.
Each IVF cycle costs less than $272 using this system, not including staff and medication costs, which vary from country to country. But Dr Ombelet says they can decrease the normal price for IVF in any given country by at least 70-80%.
"With very low dose medication schemes we hope to perform IVF in developing countries for less than $680 dollars "
Prof Thinus Kruger and Dr Matseseng are fertility experts from Tygerberg Hospital in Cape Town.
They already have a special fertility programme that cuts costs by economizing on medication and staffing - Nosiphiwo was one of the many women who was helped to conceive by this program.
Now they want to see how the new system compares to their normal laboratory procedure.
"It's really theoretically amazing," says Professor Kruger. "But we will have to see how patient and scientist friendly this system is. It is a little lab, so you still need the knowledge to handle those small embryos."
Prof Van Blerkom believes that efforts to bring the cost of fertility treatment down would please the IVF pioneer Robert Edwards, whose work led to the birth of the first test tube baby, Louise Brown.( Dr Robert Edwards of Manchester England won the Nobel Prize for medicine in 2010 )
"People can make fortunes through IVF. But Bob Edwards was a real believer that IVF should be universal, because he knew the suffering that infertility caused."
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