This Infertility Website is Trying to Help Us All Reimagine Sex Education

There’s no question that anyone dealing with infertility needs a supportive community. But what if there was a specific resource that not only offered support, but also helped people trying to conceive (TTC) advocate for themselves by providing science-backed information and education?

Enter Rescripted, a social network and digital pharmacy that provides articles, podcasts, videos, and support groups for the 6.7 million Americans who struggle with infertility. Rescripted launched in July 2021 as the brainchild of two IVF moms (both of twins!) and friends, Kristyn Hodgdon and Abby Mercado. Less than two years later, Rescripted now reaches about 9 million people on a monthly basis across all its platforms, with its free community boasting 150,000 members. While Hodgdon and Mercado knew providing support was imperative to their audience, they also understood that beyond a virtual shoulder to cry on, Rescripted needed to offer sexual education and empowerment. 

Despite infertility being a common occurrence – one in five women experience infertility, and one in four pregnancies are lost – Mercado and Hodgdon were baffled by its ongoing stigma. Eventually, they discovered that numerous people lacked substantial sexual education, which further impeded their understanding of infertility. “We realized that the root is in sex ed in America,” Mercado tells SheKnows. “Why are we taught about pregnancy prevention when we really should be taught about fertility awareness? It’s so much more than putting a condom on a banana.”  

“Why are we taught about pregnancy prevention when we really should be taught about fertility awareness? It’s so much more than putting a condom on a banana.”  

The biggest a-ha! moment for Hodgdon and Mercado was when they learned that 40% of women don’t know what ovulation is, nor do they understand the role ovulation and menstruation play in conception. Because you can’t productively try for a baby if you don’t know when you’re ovulating. 

“When I was 27 and came off the birth control pill after 10 years, as a college-educated professional woman, I didn’t even know that I had to be ovulating in order to get pregnant,” admits Hodgdon. “So many women just think they can get pregnant at the drop of a hat any day of the month, so it all comes back to education.” 

Education is key, of course, but not everyone wants to read articles filled with medical jargon and little else. That’s where Rescripted comes in, a site that provides, in Mercado’s words, “science-backed content and the voice of your best friend over brunch.” Hodgdon also notes that many infertility-focused articles can’t acknowledge where someone might be in their journey, and therefore they come off as impersonal. “We incorporate that emotional component and meet our community where they are in what we call the reproductive life cycle.” 

Related story

The Discomfort of My Pregnancy Was Nothing Compared to the Pain of My Infertility