Learn More About Power

Why We Started Power

We started Power when my dad was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, and I struggled to help him access the latest immunotherapy. Hopefully Power makes it simpler for you to explore promising new treatments, during what is probably a difficult time.

Bask
Bask GillCEO at Power
Learn More About Trials
How Do Clinical Trials Work?Are Clinical Trials Safe?What Can I Expect During a Clinical Trial?
Unbiased ResultsWe believe in providing patients with all the options.
Your Data Stays Your DataWe only share your information with the clinical trials you're trying to access.
Verified Trials OnlyAll of our trials are run by licensed doctors, researchers, and healthcare companies.
1045 Sansome St, Suite 321, San Francisco, CA
hello@withpower.com(415) 900-4227
About UsClinical Trials by ConditionAll Clinical TrialsWork With Us
1
Directories
Conditions
Cities
States
Popular Categories
Depression & Anxiety
Neurology
Psychiatry
Pain
Metabolism
Treatments
Locations
Florida
New Jersey
North Carolina
Texas
Ohio
California
Pennsylvania
Kentucky
New York
Indiana
Psychology Related
Depression
Schizophrenia
Anxiety
PTSD
ADHD
Autism
Bipolar Disorder
Addiction
OCD
Eating Disorder
Treatments
Psilocybin
IVF
Dental Implant
Weight Loss
Smoking
Platelet-Rich Plasma
Testosterone
Saxenda
Melatonin
Entresto
Cities
Saint Louis
Columbus
Portland
Ann Arbor
Aurora
Salt Lake City
Rochester
Birmingham
Detroit
New Haven
Terms of Service·Privacy Policy·Cookies
Cookies & Data Use Policy

At Power, we believe in using data responsibly to help you find the right clinical trials — without compromising your privacy. This page explains how we use cookies and personal data across www.withpower.com.

Before You Create a Profile

When you browse Power's website, you're opting in to our use of cookies. Cookies are used to improve your experience and help us understand how the site is used so that we can make improvements for you in the future. Specifically, we use cookies to:

Personalize Your Experience

We use cookies to customize your visit based on basic information like your general location (determined by your IP address). This allows us to:

  • Show you clinical trials that are geographically relevant to you
  • Tailor search results to match the conditions or keywords you've explored before
  • Pre-fill certain fields or remember your previous searches, so you don't have to repeat them

Save Your Preferences

We remember what you interact with during your visit — for example:

  • The conditions you search for
  • Whether you prefer certain types of studies (e.g., paid trials, trials for a specific age group)
  • Your sorting or filtering preferences when browsing trials

This helps us make your experience more efficient and personalized the next time you visit.

Understand How the Site Is Used

Cookies help us collect anonymous usage data so we can make Power better. We use these insights to:

  • Monitor how users move through the site — for example, which pages get the most traffic and where users tend to exit
  • Track how long visitors stay on each page and whether they find what they’re looking for
  • Identify points of friction or confusion so we can improve usability
  • Test design changes (like different page layouts or buttons) and measure which version performs better
  • Detect and fix bugs or slow-loading pages to maintain site reliability

These analytics are aggregated and do not include personal identifiers. We use tools like Google Analytics to process this data, but we don't use it to target ads or sell your information.

We do not:

  • Sell or share your personal data with advertisers
  • Use your behavior on our site to target you with third-party ads

All cookie use is designed to support your experience on Power — never to track you across the internet or monetize your information.

After You Create a Profile

When you sign up for a Power account, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. Creating a profile allows us to better serve you by tailoring the platform to your specific needs.

Once you create a profile:

  • We may collect additional information about your health and clinical interests to help us match you to the most relevant studies.
  • We continue to use cookies to remember your session, keep you logged in, and personalize your dashboard.
  • You have full control — you can delete your profile at any time, and we'll remove your personal data in accordance with our privacy practices.

We use your data solely to fulfill our mission: helping you find clinical trials that could be a fit — not for advertising or resale.

·Security
Condition
Suggested Conditions
  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Alzheimer's Disease
  • Weight Loss
  • Heart Disease
  • Cancer
  • Asthma
Location

    Ivf

    Chicago, IL

    Search
    Ivf
    Chicago, IL
    Show Map
    Map View
    Chicago, IL
    Search Clinical Trials
    Conditions
    Suggestions
    • Anxiety
    • Depression
    • Alzheimer's Disease
    • Weight Loss
    • Heart Disease
    • Cancer
    • Asthma
    Locations
    Suggestions
      Treatment Type
      Suggestions
      • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
      • Medication Management
      • Group Therapy
      • Psychotherapy
      • Mindfulness-Based Therapy
      • Exposure Therapy

      Trial Phase

      Trial Status

      Paid Participation

      Filters

      0

      Suggestions
      • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
      • Medication Management
      • Group Therapy
      • Psychotherapy
      • Mindfulness-Based Therapy
      • Exposure Therapy

      Paid Participation

      Trial Status

      Trial Phase

      Clear All
      Why We Started Power

      We started Power when my dad was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, and I struggled to help him access the latest immunotherapy. Hopefully Power makes it simpler for you to explore promising new treatments, during what is probably a difficult time.

      Bask
      Bask GillCEO at Power
      Learn More About Trials
      How Do Clinical Trials Work?Are Clinical Trials Safe?What Can I Expect During a Clinical Trial?

      No Clinical Trials Found

      Power is an online platform that helps thousands of Ivf patients discover FDA-reviewed trials every day. Every trial we feature meets safety and ethical standards, giving patients an easy way to discover promising new treatments in the research stage.

      Learn More About Power
      No Placebo
      Highly Paid
      Stay on Current Meds
      Pivotal Trials (Near Approval)
      Breakthrough Medication
      No Clinical Trials Found

      No results match your current search. Try removing one or more filters below, or updating your condition to see more clinical trials.

      Clear All FiltersClear All Filters, Condition, and Location

      Know someone looking for new options?
      Spread the word

      Why We Started Power

      We started Power when my dad was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, and I struggled to help him access the latest immunotherapy. Hopefully Power makes it simpler for you to explore promising new treatments, during what is probably a difficult time.

      Bask
      Bask GillCEO at Power
      Learn More About Trials
      How Do Clinical Trials Work?Are Clinical Trials Safe?What Can I Expect During a Clinical Trial?

      Frequently Asked Questions

      How much do Ivf clinical trials in Chicago, IL pay?

      Each trial will compensate patients a different amount, but $50-100 for each visit is a fairly common range for Phase 2–4 trials (Phase 1 trials often pay substantially more). Further, most trials will cover the costs of a travel to-and-from the clinic.

      How do Ivf clinical trials in Chicago, IL work?

      After a researcher reviews your profile, they may choose to invite you in to a screening appointment, where they'll determine if you meet 100% of the eligibility requirements. If you do, you'll be sorted into one of the treatment groups, and receive your study drug. For some trials, there is a chance you'll receive a placebo. Across Ivf trials in Chicago, IL 30% of clinical trials have a placebo. Typically, you'll be required to check-in with the clinic every month or so. The average trial length in Chicago, IL for Ivf is 12 months.

      How do I participate in a study as a "healthy volunteer"?

      Not all studies recruit healthy volunteers: usually, Phase 1 studies do. Participating as a healthy volunteer means you will go to a research facility in Chicago, IL several times over a few days or weeks to receive a dose of either the test treatment or a "placebo," which is a harmless substance that helps researchers compare results. You will have routine tests during these visits, and you'll be compensated for your time and travel, with the number of appointments and details varying by study.

      What does the "phase" of a clinical trial mean?

      The phase of a trial reveals what stage the drug is in to get approval for a specific condition. Phase 1 trials are the trials to collect safety data in humans. Phase 2 trials are those where the drug has some data showing safety in humans, but where further human data is needed on drug effectiveness. Phase 3 trials are in the final step before approval. The drug already has data showing both safety and effectiveness. As a general rule, Phase 3 trials are more promising than Phase 2, and Phase 2 trials are more promising than phase 1.

      Do I need to be insured to participate in a Ivf medical study in Chicago, IL?

      Clinical trials are almost always free to participants, and so do not require insurance. The only exception here are trials focused on cancer, because only a small part of the typical treatment plan is actually experimental. For these cancer trials, participants typically need insurance to cover all the non-experimental components.

      What are the newest Ivf clinical trials in Chicago, IL?

      New clinical trials are added to our platform regularly.

      Which type of IVF is best?

      There isn’t one “best” IVF for everyone—what works best depends on your situation. Conventional high-dose IVF (or IVF + ICSI for severe male-factor infertility) is often chosen when you need the highest number of embryos quickly, mild/mini-stim or natural-cycle IVF can suit women who want lower drug exposure or have low ovarian reserve, and donor-egg IVF gives the highest success when egg quality is the main problem. Talk with a reproductive endocrinologist about your age, egg and sperm tests, medical risks, budget, and how many children you hope for; those factors together point to the right IVF strategy for you.

      What are the unintended consequences of IVF?

      Think of IVF risks in three stages. 1) During treatment: strong fertility drugs can occasionally cause ovarian-hyperstimulation (pain, fluid build-up; severe forms in <1 % of cycles) and procedures carry small risks of bleeding or infection. 2) During pregnancy: because more than one embryo may take, twins or triplets are more common, raising chances of miscarriage, high blood pressure, C-section, or premature birth; single-embryo transfer and careful monitoring now cut this risk sharply. 3) For the child and family: babies from IVF are mostly healthy, but studies show a small increase in low birth-weight and certain birth defects (roughly 1–2 extra cases per 100 births), and families must also weigh the emotional stress and financial cost of repeated cycles. Discussing embryo number, drug dosing, and support resources with your fertility team is the main way to minimise these unintended consequences.

      Why are IVF meds so expensive?

      IVF drug prices are high because several costs stack on top of one another: they are expensive biologic proteins to manufacture, sold to a relatively small group of patients, protected by patents with few biosimilar competitors, and dispensed through specialty pharmacies with little insurance price pressure—together this keeps per-cycle medication bills in the roughly $3,000-$5,000 range in the U.S. Ask your clinic about lower-cost urinary or biosimilar gonadotropins, manufacturer “compassionate-care” discounts, and price quotes from multiple specialty pharmacies; these steps can shave hundreds to thousands of dollars from that total.

      What are the odds of getting a successful IVF?

      Success in IVF is usually measured by a live-birth: in the most recent CDC data a woman under 35 averages about a 45 % chance per cycle, 35-37 yrs about 35 %, 38-40 yrs about 25 %, and over 40 yrs 5-15 %; when you add two more cycles the cumulative chance rises to roughly 65-70 %, 60 %, 50 %, and 20-30 % respectively. Age is the single biggest predictor, but clinic expertise, cause of infertility, embryo testing, and lifestyle (weight, smoking) can raise or lower these odds, so ask your clinic for their age-specific live-birth rates when deciding how many cycles to attempt.

      Did Courteney Cox do IVF?

      Yes. Courteney Cox has said she went through several rounds of in-vitro fertilisation after suffering repeated miscarriages and, once doctors treated an underlying blood-clotting/antibody problem with blood thinners, one IVF cycle led to the successful pregnancy that produced her daughter Coco in 2004. Claims that an MTHFR gene mutation was the specific cause come from secondary websites rather than Cox’s own statements or medical reports and are not supported by current medical evidence.

      Why is IVF controversial?

      IVF sparks debate for three main reasons: it routinely creates extra embryos whose freezing, testing or disposal some religions and bioethicists view as ending a life; the hormone treatments and transfer of multiple embryos can put mothers and babies at higher medical risk; and its high price, use by single or same-sex parents, and patchwork laws force society to ask who should access or regulate it. In short, IVF sits at the intersection of embryo ethics, patient safety and shifting social norms, so people’s views vary with the weight they give each of those concerns.

      Are IVF babies more likely to have ADHD?

      Large national studies that account for prematurity, twins and parental health find no meaningful increase in ADHD among children conceived with IVF; any small uptick seen in a few analyses (≈10 % relative, <1 per 1 000 absolute) disappears when those other factors are included. In short, current evidence says the lab process of IVF is not a direct cause of ADHD—focusing on a healthy single-baby pregnancy and routine pediatric follow-up remains the best way to support your child.

      Is IVF hard on the body?

      IVF does put extra demands on your body—most people feel bloating, mood swings and a day or two of pelvic soreness, while serious problems like severe ovarian-hyperstimulation happen in fewer than 2 % of cycles and are closely monitored. With today’s gentler drug protocols, good pain control and prompt follow-up, the physical effects are usually short-lived, so the bigger challenge for many couples is managing stress and expectations rather than long-term harm. Most patients are back to normal activities within a few days; call your clinic right away if you have sudden severe pain, rapid weight gain or trouble breathing.

      How to get more mature eggs IVF?

      A “mature” egg is one that has reached the M-II stage so it can be fertilised—your goal is to raise both the number and the percentage of these eggs. Ask your doctor about protocol tweaks that research shows can help, such as adding a little LH during stimulation, using a “dual-trigger” (GnRH-agonist plus low-dose hCG) 36 hours before retrieval, or starting supplements like DHEA or CoQ10 6–8 weeks beforehand if you have low ovarian reserve. At home, keep a healthy BMI, avoid tobacco/alcohol, and follow a Mediterranean-style diet and moderate exercise; these steps improve blood flow and hormone balance but work best when combined with the right medication plan.

      Who is a bad candidate for IVF?

      IVF is usually discouraged when (1) the woman has almost no usable eggs and will not consider donor eggs, (2) serious medical conditions or extreme obesity make pregnancy hazardous, or (3) the uterus is so damaged or absent that it cannot carry a baby. It is also unlikely to help after repeated failed cycles with poor-quality embryos or when pregnancy risks outweigh benefits; in these cases doctors discuss options such as donor eggs, a gestational carrier, or adoption. A reproductive-endocrinology team reviews ovarian reserve tests, overall health, and uterine anatomy to decide whether IVF, an alternative treatment, or avoiding pregnancy is the safest plan.

      Popular Searches

      By Condition

      Depression Clinical Trials in Illinois

      Anxiety Clinical Trials in Illinois

      Schizophrenia Clinical Trials in Illinois

      ADHD Clinical Trials in Illinois

      Bipolar Disorder Clinical Trials in Illinois

      Multiple Sclerosis Clinical Trials in Illinois

      Autism Clinical Trials in Illinois

      Treatment Resistant Depression Clinical Trials in Illinois

      Borderline Personality Disorder Clinical Trials in Illinois

      Social Anxiety Disorder Clinical Trials in Illinois

      Parkinson's Disease Clinical Trials in Illinois

      Alzheimer's Disease Clinical Trials in Illinois

      By Location

      Clinical Trials near Chicago, IL

      Clinical Trials near Peoria, IL

      Clinical Trials near Springfield, IL

      Clinical Trials near Urbana, IL

      Clinical Trials near Evanston, IL

      Clinical Trials near Maywood, IL

      Clinical Trials near Decatur, IL

      Clinical Trials near Galesburg, IL

      Clinical Trials near Normal, IL

      Clinical Trials near Bloomington, IL

      Clinical Trials near Skokie, IL

      Clinical Trials near Peru, IL

      Other People Viewed

      By Subject

      51 Glioblastoma Trials near Chicago, IL

      Top Schizophrenia Clinical Trials near San Diego, CA

      117 Clinical Trials near Cambridge, MN

      Top Clinical Trials near Huntingdon Valley, PA

      130 Clinical Trials near Michigan

      Top Clinical Trials near Albany, NY

      145 Prostate Cancer Trials near Ventura, CA

      69 Prostate Cancer Trials near Albuquerque, NM

      Top Weight Loss Clinical Trials near Tampa, FL

      Top Clinical Trials near Fort Myers, FL

      Top Weight Loss Clinical Trials near San Diego, CA

      Top Clinical Trials near Foxboro, MA

      By Trial

      Wheelchair Skills Training for Mobility Impairments

      JNJ-69086420 for Prostate Cancer

      ATI-045 for Eczema

      Lenvatinib + Pembrolizumab + Chemotherapy for Gastroesophageal Cancer

      ePVA Monitoring System for Head and Neck Cancer

      Pre-pectoral vs Sub-pectoral Implant Placement for Breast Reconstruction

      Glepaglutide for Short Bowel Syndrome

      Telehealth Strategies for Lung Cancer Screening

      ARC Intervention for HIV/AIDS

      Photodynamic Therapy for Actinic Keratosis

      Patient Navigation for Timely Breast Cancer Diagnosis During COVID-19

      Exparel for Post-Surgery Pain Management in Thyroid Conditions