The F Chat
Nobody talks about fertility. Until they have to.
Fertility affects more Australians than ever, yet many of us reach adulthood without understanding the basics of reproductive health, fertility timelines or when to seek support. New research commissioned by QueenslandFertilityGroup, reveals 81% of Aussies feel the pressure of their biological clock, but only 33% have spoken to their partner about fertility[1].
The F Chat is a video series bringing together fertility specialists and everyday Australians for honest conversations about fertility, reproductive health and the questions many people are thinking about but not always asking.
From understanding what's normal and recognising early signs of reproductive health conditions, to navigating fertility timelines, emotions and modern family building, these are the conversations we should be having sooner.
Watch the episodes, explore expert insights and start The F Chat.
Because the best time to have the conversation is before you need it.
Watch the episodes below
F is for Everyone
There's no one way to build a family. Join fertility specialist Dr Simone Campbell alongside Adam, Amy and Sam as they share different perspectives on fertility, donor conception, solo parenthood and the questions many people don't think to ask until much later.
Own your F Timeline
What if the timeline you imagined isn't the one life had planned? Fertility specialist Dr Eva Kretowicz joins Alisha, Riana and Sam for an honest conversation about fertility, timing and how our expectations for the future don't always match reality.
What do symptoms mean for F?
One person's dealing with painful periods. Another is looking into egg freezing. One admits he knew almost nothing about fertility before joining the conversation. Join fertility specialist Dr Abigail Evans alongside Alisha, Faye and Sheng as they unpack the questions so many of us have about periods, reproductive health and fertility.
[1]Consumer research commissioned by IVFAustralia, MelbourneIVF, QueenslandFertilityGroup and TasIVF, 2026. A total of 2,012 Australians aged 25–44 years participated in the survey.