Content Sources & Editorial Standards
At Hanabusa IVF, we believe compassion and clarity go hand in hand with rigorous science. Every educational article we publish is grounded in credible evidence and shaped by our clinic’s medical and scientific approaches and ethics—prioritizing quality, personalization, and transparency.
How We Build Our Content
- Evidence-led: We rely on peer-reviewed research, professional society guidelines, and trusted public-health data.
- Physician-reviewed: Content is reviewed by our medical team for clinical accuracy and relevance.
- Current & transparent: We reference the most up-to-date sources available and clearly cite statistics, definitions, and medical terms.
- Patient-first language: We translate complex concepts into plain English without oversimplifying the science.
Organizations & Resources We Commonly Reference
Professional Societies & Registries
- American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM)
- Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology (SART)
- European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE)
Public-Health & Government
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) – Assisted Reproductive Technology & Reproductive Health
- National Institutes of Health (NIH)
- Office on Women’s Health (U.S. HHS)
Peer-Reviewed Databases & Education
- PubMed (National Library of Medicine)
- MedlinePlus – Reproductive Health
- ReproductiveFacts.org (ASRM)
Patient Advocacy & Education
- RESOLVE: The National Infertility Association
- Fertility Network UK
- FertilityIQ
Global Health
- World Health Organization (WHO) – Sexual & Reproductive Health
- (When relevant) National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE, UK) guidance
Our Citation Practice
- Inline citations or source lists accompany statistics, definitions, and direct quotes.
- Study details (authors, journal, year) are included when they materially influence recommendations or context.
- Updates & revisions occur when new, higher-quality evidence emerges or guidelines change.
If you’d like the references behind a specific article—or have questions about how we interpret the research—please contact us and we’ll share the full source list for that piece.






