The Quest for Fertility

Fertility Is One of the Earliest Signals of Lifelong Health

Fertility is not just about having a baby. It reflects biology, lifestyle, environment, and long-term health—often years before symptoms appear.

Drawing on decades of clinical experience and training at the National Institutes of Health, Dr. Oluyemisi Famuyiwa reframes fertility as part of whole-body health, helping readers move from confusion and fear toward clarity and informed choice.

Fertility isn’t a mystery— it’s a formula.

And it starts long before you’re ready to conceive.

Learn how to understand your hormones, optimize your health, and take charge of your fertility on your own terms.

Praise for The Quest for Fertility and Dr. Oluyemisi Famuyiwa

About the author

The Quest for Fertility is written by Dr. Oluyemisi Famuyiwa, a board-certified reproductive endocrinologist with over 25 years of clinical experience, NIH training, and a global patient population.

Meet Dr. Oluyemisi Famuyiwa

She is the Founder and Medical Director of Montgomery Fertility Center, an Assistant Professor at George Washington University, host of the Fertile Talks podcast, and a frequent media contributor on reproductive health.

Dr. Famuyiwa brings cultural fluency and evidence-based medicine together, caring for individuals and couples across backgrounds, belief systems, and healthcare environments. Her approach aligns with global public health principles recognized by the World Health Organization and emphasizes education before crisis.

Her work centers on one idea:

Inside the Book, You Will Learn

Why fertility challenges often develop quietly, years before symptoms appear

Why “normal” fertility tests do not tell the full story

How thyroid disease, PCOS, endometriosis, metabolism, and inflammation intersect

Why male fertility matters just as much as female fertility

How modern reproductive technologies work and how to approach them with clarity

How sleep, stress, lifestyle, and environmental exposures shape eggs, sperm, and embryos

Why early knowledge expands options, regardless of outcome or pathway

Start Your Fertility Education Early