How does a vasectomy work and what are the prerequisites?
I'm currently considering having one. I don't have any children and I'm still young. Why am I thinking about it?
I have an illness that I could even pass on to my children and cause them more harm, which I really don't want.
Would the urologist approve this? Because that's what I'd like to use as a reason. In a marriage, you want to be healthy and happy, not sick, which often ends up in the hospital, and causes tears.
Prerequisite is called full-year. Family planning should be completed, which is the case with you. In the end, it’s up to the doctor to do the surgery. There is still the possibility of pre-implantation diagnostics for inheritable diseases.
I don’t think I’m going to accept the cost of the sickness fund. The medical intervention should be necessary for this. This would be the case, for example, with recurring testicular inflammations due to ascending germs. The vasectomy is a treatment option. Psychic reasons could, of course, also justify a medical need.
I’m not an expert, but you don’t have to pay the intervention like that or something from your own pocket? Then it doesn’t matter if the cash register asks for your reasons. You just need a doctor to touch the surgery. But I can be totally wrong. Why not ask the true expert? Your doctor or the clinic on the spot where the surgery was?
Before I make an appointment, I just want to be sure that everything can be admitted. I wanted to know if my reasoning was admissible. I don’t want to go there and get the answer “We’re sorry we won’t be done.”
So in the sense I am full-year but despite everything I want to be sure and for questions on the net.
Demands on the net will never make you safe. The 10-year-old jasmine can say that, yes, I’m sure it will.
As I said, you don’t need any more reason except that you definitely decided against children.
Doesn’t matter, it just wants to secure exactly how the conversation will proceed on the subject of illness. Doesn’t want to secure me anymore.
You have to be full-year. You’ll discuss everything else with the treating urologist.