Bulawayo Assisted Reproductive Technology Centre

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Bulawayo Assisted Reproductive Technology Centre is a fertility centre in Bulawayo. It was founded by, Dr Jephat Moyo, a specialist gynaecologist. BART first opened in 2016, and in 2017, the first couple assisted gave birth to their baby girl in August.

Contact Details

11A Medical Centre
Cnr 8th and Tongogara
Bulawayo

Business Hours
Mon – Fri: 0800 – 1700
Sat: 0800 - 1200

Tel: +263 9 888176 - +263 9 888191
Cell: +263 774 100634
[1]

Offers

  • In-vitro fertilization (IVF)
  • Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection (ICSI)
  • Egg freezing and Embyro freezing
  • Ovulation Induction and Intrauterine insemination(IUI)
  • We also facilitate and offer Egg and Sperm donation

At the anniversary celebration of the centre, it was announced that 17 couples have already been assisted to have children.

In fertility treatments, basically, eggs are removed from a woman’s body. The eggs are then mixed with sperm to make embryos. The embryos are put back in the woman’s body, resulting in the woman giving birth.

Government needs to address problems in the health sector to minimise the migration of health specialists to other countries. in search of greener pastures. Poor working conditions, lack of machinery and equipment and lack of pharmaceuticals in Zimbabwe results in many specialists departing Zimbabwe and leaving gaps in public hospitals. For example, there should be at least five gynaecologists in Bulawayo, but there are none. There are not enough paediatric health specialists and anaesthetists. There is a shortage of cardiac surgery specialists in Zimbabwe leading to the death of many heart surgery patients. “This is because few doctors are willing to cope with conditions at public hospitals. In the end everything is privatised at the expense of the ordinary citizen,” Dr Francis Chiwora, Zimbabwe Medical Association (Zima) national president, said. [2]


A new baby girl is the first in vitro fertilisation (IVF) birth to have resulted from the Bulawayo Assisted Reproductive Technology (BART) Centre’s work. “Our first baby,” said Dr Jephat Moyo, in August 2017. The IVF procedure involves fertilizing an egg outside the body, in a laboratory dish, and then implanting it in a woman’s uterus.

“We’re sitting at between 30 and 50 percent success rate at this clinic and we’re happy with the progress so far,” said Dr Moyo. The unit was established to address the challenge of infertility which affects 20 percent of couples worldwide. The centre charges the same as those charged by fertility centres in South Africa and other countries.

Health and Child Care Minister Dr David Parirenyatwa visited the BART centre early this year and commended Dr Moyo for establishing the clinic, saying the institution was long overdue. The first baby in the world to be conceived through in vitro fertilisation, Louise Brown, was born in 1978 in Manchester in the United Kingdom. The second successful test tube baby birth occurred 67 days later in India. [3]

  1. Bulawayo Assisted Reproductive Technlogy Centre, Company website, Published: 2019, Retrieved: 10 December 2019
  2. Bulawayo fertility centre helps 17 couples in first year, Chronicle, Published: 11 December 2018, Retrieved: 10 December 2019
  3. Bulawayo delivers its first ‘test tube’ baby, The Herald, Published: 14 August 2017, Retrieved: 10 December 2019

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