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Below average · HFEA Licensed

Salisbury Fertility Centre

Salisbury, United KingdomHFEA: Below averageNHS-friendly
Live birth rate
26%
-11pp vs UK avg
Cycles 2016–18
437
Low volume
Blastocyst rate
36%
stronger lab when higher
Multiple birth
6%
lower is safer
Starting from
price not listed

Should I shortlist this clinic?

Below-average outcomes — strongest for ages 38-39.

Based on age-adjusted HFEA live-birth data (2016–18) vs the UK national average.

Good fit if
you're in the 38-39 age band — their strongest results
you're considering IUI, their best-performing treatment
you're looking for NHS-funded treatment
Look closer if
outcomes for the Under 35 age band are below the national average
it's a lower-volume clinic — fewer cycles behind the figures
Questions to ask before booking
·What's included in the quoted price, and what add-on costs are typical?
·What were your live-birth rates for my age group in the latest HFEA data?
·How many cycles like mine do you carry out each year?
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About

The Salisbury Fertility Centre presents a dual-faceted image based on patient experiences. While many reviewers highlight positive aspects of staff demeanor and clinical competence, significant concerns emerge regarding accessibility, personalized care, and treatment customization. The clinic is situated within an NHS hospital environment, which some patients note contributes to a 'clinical and cold' atmosphere, though this perception is juxtaposed against frequent praise for staff warmth. Multiple patients describe staff members – including nurses, lab technicians, and counsellors – as 'kind', 'friendly', and supportive during treatment cycles and setbacks. The emotional support infrastructure appears robust, with specific appreciation for the fertility counsellor's role in providing psychological care during challenging treatment journeys. Patients who underwent uncomplicated treatment protocols (particularly IUI cycles) reported feeling 'looked after' and expressed willingness to return for future treatments. However, substantial criticism exists around communication barriers and care personalization. Many patients cite extreme difficulty contacting staff via phone, describing needing to call 'hundreds of times' across treatment phases – a pain point impacting both treatment coordination and post-treatment follow-up. Beyond logistical challenges, more profound concerns emerge regarding customized treatment plans for complex conditions. One patient with endometriosis reported inadequate consideration of their condition during both surgical planning and medication protocols. During their first egg collection cycle, clinicians could not access the left ovary due to anatomical obstructions – an issue that reportedly remained unexplained throughout treatment. The patient further alleges that surgical solutions (laparoscopic intervention) were not pursued due to time constraints related to clinic scheduling and shift changes. Subsequent frozen embryo transfers sparked disagreement between clinicians and the patient regarding progesterone supplementation protocols. Despite experiencing bleeding potentially linked to insufficient progesterone during the first FET, the clinic reportedly refused additional progesterone support during the second FET attempt, forcing the patient to seek private care. This experience underscores broader concerns about flexibility in medication protocols and responsiveness to patient-reported symptoms. While multiple reviewers acknowledge clinical competence in standard procedures, the clinic's perceived resistance to individualized protocol adjustments – particularly for patients with comorbidities like endometriosis – raises questions about adaptability in complex cases. Treatment outcomes appear variable among reviewers, with unsuccessful cycles being partially attributed to insufficient personalization of care rather than generalized clinical incompetence. Success stories exist alongside disappointing outcomes, suggesting patient experiences may vary depending on case complexity and treatment phase oversight. The laboratory and embryology services receive neutral to positive mentions, though no detailed commentary on specific techniques (e.g., cryopreservation quality, ICSI utilization) emerges from these reviews. Patients considering this clinic should balance reported staff warmth and operational competence against potential challenges in communication accessibility, treatment flexibility, and complex case management – particularly for those with pre-existing reproductive health conditions requiring tailored interventions. Those pursuing straightforward treatment pathways may find satisfactory care here, while patients with challenging diagnoses should inquire specifically about protocol customization policies and surgical coordination capabilities.

Treatments offered
Lab quality signals
36%
Blastocyst rate
Higher = stronger lab
35%
Elective single ET
eSET = ethical practice
6%
Multiple birth rate
Lower = safer outcomes

Questions people ask about Salisbury Fertility Centre

Written in PATH's voice from this clinic's published HFEA data — reviewed before publishing, never generated live.

Is Salisbury Fertility Centre a good match for my age group?

Salisbury Fertility Centre's HFEA-verified live-birth rate is 26%, below the national average of 37%. Age-band figures show under-35 patients, the clinic's weakest band, at 18% against 38% nationally, notably below the national figure, while 38-39 sees 24% against 26%, close to average. IUI is recorded as its best-performing treatment. With 437 cycles carried out, this is a low-volume clinic, so it's worth asking directly how these age-band figures have moved across recent years rather than reading one set of numbers as fixed.

What does Salisbury Fertility Centre's headline success rate mean?

The published figure is the live-birth rate per embryo transferred, based on HFEA-regulated data covering 2016 to 2018. Before comparing it with another clinic, check whether both rates are quoted per embryo transferred or per cycle started, since the two are calculated differently, and check which years each clinic's data covers, as a clinic's more recent performance may not match an older published figure. Regulated data is a useful, verified starting point, but it describes a group of past patients rather than any one individual's outcome.

What's worth asking Salisbury Fertility Centre before I book?

A few things worth putting to the clinic directly: - What's included in the quoted price, and what add-on costs are typical? - What were your live-birth rates for my age group in the latest HFEA data? - How many cycles like mine do you carry out each year? A good consultant will welcome these questions and answer them clearly.

These answers use published data only — PATH personalizes once it knows your age, your numbers, and your story.

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Quick intel
Best age band38-39
Total cycles437
Blastocyst rate36%
Elective single ET35%
Multiple birth rate6%
Bias firewall
This clinic has not paid for placement. Data from HFEA + patient reviews only.
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