Jenny Saft was 30 years old when she moved back to Germany from the United States in 2017. She used to work in the technology industry in San Francisco, but wants to continue to develop in her hometown. She has no desire to have children, and she can’t find a suitable partner anyway. But she wants to keep the possibility of becoming a mother. She knows many women in Silicon Valley who freeze their eggs for later fertilization. When she found out that the social freeze in Germany, she was rejected by many doctors. “For a single woman who decides when, how and with whom to have children, there is almost no preparation here.” She founded Oviavo with Tobias Kaufhold: ein start up, The company helps employees educate and support the issue of childbirth and family planning.
Oviavo is one of a growing number of start-ups, providing services related to the following areas Wish for children Make fertility problems more obvious. Education, marriage, family? Many employment and family biographies have long been less linear-and less heterosexual. Today’s families are more diverse and established late. In 2019, a woman in Germany was 30.1 years old when she gave birth to her first child, five and a half years older than in the 1970s. “At the age of 35, about 50% of female scholars in this country still have no children,” Saft said. “About half of the people stay. This is not always the case, but it is usually unintentional.” For example, because at some point pregnancy doesn’t work at all.



