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Tag: IVF

  • IVF treatments for same-sex couples to be covered by Aetna in national settlement

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    Like many young girls, Mara Berton and June Higginbotham both knew from an early age they wanted families and to become mothers. But as lesbians, they were excluded from accessing the same fertility treatment insurance benefits offered to heterosexual peers.

    Instead, like many other same-sex couples, Berton and Higginbotham, who live in California, had to pay $45,000 out of pocket to conceive while heterosexual colleagues with the same insurance plan had many of those costs covered.

    “We knew it wasn’t right,” Berton said in an exclusive interview with CalMatters. She joined a class action lawsuit challenging the policy. “What we’re fighting for is about family building and having kids … It was really important to both of us, I think, that other couples not have to do this.”

    Last week, in a landmark settlement, U.S. District Judge for the Northern District of California Haywood Gilliam Jr. approved a preliminary agreement for the class action lawsuit requiring Aetna to cover fertility treatments for same-sex couples — like artificial insemination or in vitro fertilization — as they do with heterosexual couples. It is the first case requiring a health insurer to apply this policy nationally across all of its enrollees. An estimated 2.8 million LGBTQ members will benefit, including 91,000 Californians.

    Under the settlement, Aetna will also pay at least $2 million in damages to California-based members who qualify. Those who may be eligible must submit a claim by June 29, 2026.

    “I truly hope that this is the first of many insurers to change their policy,” said Alison Tanner, senior litigation counsel for reproductive rights and health at the National Women’s Law Center. “We were looking at that as an issue of inequality — that folks who were in same-sex relationships were being treated differently.”

    Roughly 9 million additional Californians will soon have access to mandated fertility benefits under a new law taking effect in January. The law applies to state-regulated plans — which Aetna is not in this case — and amends the definition of infertility to include same-sex couples and single people.

    Previously, Aetna’s policy required enrollees to engage in six to 12 months of “unprotected heterosexual sexual intercourse” without conceiving before qualifying for fertility benefits, according to the class action complaint. The policy allowed for women “without a male partner” to access benefits only after undergoing six to 12 cycles of artificial insemination unsuccessfully depending on age.

    Lawyers argued that the policy fundamentally treated LGBTQ members differently and effectively denied them access to the benefit, which can be prohibitively expensive for many people.

    In an email, Aetna spokesperson Phillip Blando said the plan provides infertility benefits in accordance with each member’s plan, coverage rules and applicable law.

    “Aetna is committed to equal access to infertility coverage and reproductive health coverage for all its members, and we will continue to strive toward improving access to services for our entire membership,” Blando said.

    Berton, who was the lead plaintiff in the case, said she was blindsided by the policy. She had consulted with a fertility clinic and decided to move forward with donor sperm and artificial insemination, when a representative from Aetna called and said she did not meet the definition of infertility.

    She appealed the decision multiple times; she was rejected. The experience felt “dehumanizing,” her wife Higginbotham said.

    Insurance had dictated Berton attempt 12 rounds of artificial insemination before she would be eligible for benefits. Her doctors recommended no more than four rounds.

    Sean Tipton, chief advocacy and policy director for the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, said a policy like that could only be designed to dissuade people from accessing their health benefits. Doctors typically recommend three to four cycles of artificial insemination before IVF, but Tipton said there have also been studies showing it is more efficient and cost effective to go straight to IVF.

    In 2023, the society updated its medical definition of infertility to include LGBTQ folks and individuals who don’t have partners. They did so in part to stop insurers from denying claims like Berton and Higginbotham’s.

    “The driving force was a realization that it takes two kinds of gametes to have kids,” Tipton said. “Regardless of the cause of that absence, you have to have access in order to be treated for a fertility issue.”

    An illustration shows the process of artificial insemination or in vitro fertilization, known as IVF.

    Ruslanas Baranauskas/Science Photo Library


    Since the definition changed, Tipton said more employers and insurers are covering benefits for LGBTQ folks or single people. They have also leveraged the definition to enact statewide benefits expansions, including California’s upcoming fertility benefits mandate.

    Berton and Higginbotham said they also worried about running out of donor sperm that matched Higginbotham’s Jewish and Native American heritage — and was limited in supply.

    “I don’t feel like your insurance should be involved in those types of decisions and kind of determine your journey,” Berton said.

    The couple pulled together money from family members and decided to proceed even without coverage. After four unsuccessful rounds of intrauterine insemination, they moved on to IVF, partially to give themselves the best chance of conceiving with the donor they chose.

    The experience was “all consuming” and emotionally difficult as Berton endured hormone injections, egg retrievals and a miscarriage. But today, she and Higginbotham have two healthy twin girls whose favorite thing is to play on the swings and “take every book off of their shelf” for their mothers to read.

    The couple achieved their family dreams before the lawsuit concluded. Even so, Higginbotham said she hopes the settlement will help other LGBTQ couples across the country.

    “I know people that don’t have children, that wanted children, because the stuff isn’t covered. I know people that their timeline was delayed and maybe they have fewer kids than they wanted,” Higginbotham said. “The settlement is such a huge step forward that is really righting a huge wrong.”

    This story was originally published by CalMatters and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.

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  • With embryo donation on the rise, more families are choosing connection over anonymity

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    Clare Kilcullen always wanted to be a mother, but when she went through early menopause in her 20s, she wasn’t sure how that would happen. 

    “[I thought] it would probably be an egg donor, but then in my 30s, I still hadn’t met the right person, so I decided to go and do it on my own,” Kilcullen told CBS News.

    In July, Kilcullen gave birth to her daughter, Marlowe, thanks to a frozen embryo donated by a couple from Canada.

    Embryo donation is gaining in popularity. Frozen donated embryo transfers in the United States nearly quadrupled from 2004 to 2019, according to a study published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. It’s estimated there are currently more than 1 million frozen embryos in the U.S. — many from those reluctant to discard them after they are done with their cycles of in vitro fertilization. 

    “Most people usually keep them in storage in case they change their mind later,” said Dr. Richard Paulson, a fertility specialist at the University of Southern California’s Keck School of Medicine. 

    In 1986, Paulson was part of a team that reported the first successful birth from a frozen embryo in the U.S. 

    “We’ve been trying to get embryo donation off the ground for a very long time,” Paulson said. “It’s very complicated to do, because of logistics, because of legal issues, because of the fact that the parents probably were not tested for genetic disease.”

    But one company is working to make embryo donation more accessible.

    Kilcullen met her donors through Empower With Moxi, a platform using the power of the internet to facilitate embryo transfers between people who want to know something about each other — donors with frozen embryos often left over from IVF and recipients such as Kilcullen.

    “It’s not like they’re sitting on a clinic waitlist where just the next available embryo is theirs,” said Gina Davis, a genetic counselor who cofounded the company. “There’s really some choice about, do we kind of align? Are our families similar? Do we have similar values?”

    Kilcullen said she had a meeting with her embryo donors over Zoom, which felt “like the biggest job interview” of her life.

    The donors ended up giving all 10 of their embryos to Kilcullen.

    “I had some reservations knowing that she wasn’t genetically mine, and would that feel any different? But no, the minute she was placed on my chest, it was, yeah, the best thing ever,” Kilcullen said.

    Gina Davis and her husband had 17 remaining embryos after their own fertility journey. At the time, she said she had to use Facebook to find someone to donate the embryos to due to limited options.

    “When I first started thinking about donating my embryos, most of the programs throughout the country were basically anonymous. The model had been really closed, that you would just donate your embryos and you don’t know where they go,” Davis told CBS News. “We thought children deserve to know their genetic origins, and their families deserve to know a little bit more about their origin story.”

    The idea to remove anonymity from the embryo donation process has given Kilcullen exactly what she needed when deciding how to become a mom.

    “I just really wanted Marlowe to grow up knowing who the genetic family are, and it’s an extended family, which I think is beautiful for us and for them. They’ve entered that world as my child, but they were made with love from theirs,” Kilcullen said.

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  • As embryo donations surge, more families choosing connection over anonymity

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    In July, Clare Kilcullen gave birth to her daughter, Marlowe, thanks to a frozen embryo donated by a couple from Canada. As Jo Ling Kent reports, it’s part of a growing movement to maintain a connection between donors of frozen embryos and their recipients.

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  • Trump taking steps to reduce fertility treatment costs

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    Trump taking steps to reduce fertility treatment costs – CBS News










































    Watch CBS News



    President Trump said the cost of drugs for in vitro fertilization will decrease “dramatically,” as his administration has negotiated lower prices for an expensive component of the IVF cycle. Nikki Battiste has details.

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  • President Trump promises to lower IVF costs, but what do we know?

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    President Trump has promised to dramatically decrease the cost of drugs for in vitro fertilization, or IVF, in the U.S. Julie Rovner, chief Washington correspondent for KFF Health News, joins “The Daily Report” to discuss.

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  • Trump wants to make the GOP a ‘leader’ on IVF. Republicans’ actions make that a tough sell

    Trump wants to make the GOP a ‘leader’ on IVF. Republicans’ actions make that a tough sell

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    Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump’s vow to promote in vitro fertilization by forcing health insurance companies or the federal government to pay for the treatments is at odds with the actions of much of his own party.Related video above: Former President Donald Trump holds town hall in battleground state of WisconsinYet his surprising announcement Thursday reveals the former president’s realization that GOP stances on abortion and reproductive rights could be huge liabilities for his chances of returning to the White House. Trump has quickly tried to reframe the narrative around those issues after Vice President Kamala Harris entered the presidential race.Even before he made his coverage proposal, Trump had been promoting the idea that the Republican Party is a “leader” on IVF. That characterization is rejected by Democrats, who have seized on the common but expensive fertility treatment as another dimension of reproductive rights threatened by Republicans and a second Trump presidency.It’s not just political partisans.”Republicans are not leaders on IVF,” said Katie Watson, a medical ethics professor at Northwestern’s Feinberg School of Medicine. “Some of them have posed a threat to IVF, and they’re currently trying to figure out how to be anti-abortion and pro-IVF, and there are internal inconsistencies and struggles there. It appears that the Republicans are careening to remedy the political damage that resulted from their own choices.”Trump’s proposal, which he announced without providing details, illustrates how reproductive rights have become central in this year’s presidential race. It’s also the latest example of the former president attempting to appear moderate on the issue, despite repeatedly boasting about appointing the three Supreme Court justices who helped overturn the constitutional right to abortion.Even as the Republican Party has attempted to create a national narrative that it’s receptive of in vitro fertilization, many Republicans have been left grappling with the innate tension between support for the procedure and for laws passed by their own party that grant legal personhood not only to fetuses but to any embryos that are destroyed in the IVF process.The messaging efforts also have been undercut by state lawmakers, Republican-dominated courts and anti-abortion leaders within the party’s ranks, as well as opposition to legislative attempts to protect IVF access.Ahead of the Republican National Convention in July, the Republican Party adopted a policy platform that supports states establishing fetal personhood through the Constitution’s 14th Amendment, which grants equal protection under the law to all American citizens. The platform also encourages supporting IVF but does not explain how the party plans to do so while also encouraging fetal personhood laws that would render the treatment illegal.In May, the Texas Republican Party’s platform committee narrowly rejected a proposal to classify embryos created through IVF as “human beings” and designate their destruction as “homicide.” A bill aimed at expanding IVF access, meanwhile, sailed through in California on Thursday, despite opposition from nearly all Republican lawmakers.Video below: A conversation with Elizabeth Carr, the first person born via IVF in the USSen. Tammy Duckworth, a Democrat from Illinois who shared her own IVF journey on the Senate floor and co-sponsored a bill to protect the treatment, slammed Republicans for saying they support IVF in campaigning but not backing that up with their votes.She added that Supreme Court justices appointed by Trump “paved the way” for the fall of Roe v. Wade and the impact on reproductive rights, including access to IVF.”Republicans publicly claiming to be in support of IVF is absurd,” she told the AP.The issue burst onto the national political landscape in February after the all-Republican Alabama Supreme Court granted frozen embryos the legal rights of children. That decision forced clinics in Alabama to pause their IVF treatments, devastating patients struggling to be parents. Soon after, and facing a national backlash, Alabama’s Republican governor signed legislation shielding doctors from legal liability so IVF procedures could continue.In the weeks after the Alabama ruling, congressional Republicans scrambled to address IVF. Many rushed to create a unified message of support despite histories of voting in favor of fetal personhood laws and arguing that life begins at conception, the same concept that upheld the Alabama decision.”The reality is you cannot protect IVF and champion fetal personhood — they are fundamentally incompatible — and the American people won’t be fooled by another one of Donald Trump’s lies,” Sen. Patty Murray, a Democrat and co-sponsor of the Right to IVF bill, told The Associated Press.Republican Sens. Katie Britt and Ted Cruz introduced a bill this year to prohibit states from receiving Medicaid funding if they ban the procedure. But that came after Senate Republicans blocked legislation that would have made IVF a federal right. All Republicans except Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine voted against the measure.”It’s not easy for a Republican lawmaker to say they’re for IVF and actually mean it in a straightforward, tangible way without angering a lot of constituents,” said Mary Ruth Ziegler, a law professor at the University of California, Davis School of Law.An AP-NORC poll conducted in June found that more than 6 in 10 U.S. adults support protecting access to IVF, including more than half of Republicans, and only about 1 in 10 are opposed. But many anti-abortion groups and some lawmakers oppose the treatment, including several members of the right-wing Freedom Caucus who have objected to expanding IVF access for veterans.At least 23 bills aiming to establish fetal personhood have been introduced in 13 states so far this legislative session, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports abortion rights. This type of legislation, all proposed by Republican lawmakers, is based on the idea that life begins at fertilization and could imperil fertility treatments that involve the storage, transportation and destruction of embryos.Still, many GOP lawmakers have been vocal in their support for IVF. The issue is personal for Wisconsin Republican Sen. Ron Johnson, who shared his daughter’s IVF experience. But even though Johnson said he fully supports IVF, he was not completely sold on Trump’s proposal due to its possible price tag. Other Republican lawmakers who responded publicly after Trump’s announcement expressed similar concerns. “I would need to see cost estimates, impacts on insurance rates, etc., before making any decisions or commitments to support any proposal,” Johnson said.Republican lawmakers have historically opposed federal funding to cover health care, including by repeatedly attempting to undo the Obama-era Affordable Care Act, and may be unlikely to support similar plans, including for IVF.Lack of health insurance coverage for fertility treatments has been a major barrier for those wanting to start or continue treatments. While coverage has been expanding in recent years, less than half of employers with 500 or more workers in the U.S. offered IVF coverage in 2023, according to the benefits consultant Mercer.Republican Rep. Michelle Steel of California faced criticism for supporting a GOP bill aiming to grant constitutional protection to embryos at “the moment of fertilization” after she publicly shared her own experience with IVF. Steel rescinded her co-sponsorship of the measure in March, two days after winning her primary, declaring she does not support federal restrictions on IVF.In a statement to the AP, she said Congress “must pass policies to support and expand access to IVF treatments.”Such flip-flopping from Republicans only provides fodder for Democrats, who say Trump and his party can’t be trusted to protect reproductive rights.Rep. Elissa Slotkin, the Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate in Michigan, warned voters to “watch what they do, not what they say.” ___Associated Press writers Scott Bauer in Madison, Wisconsin; Tom Murphy in Indianapolis and Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux in Washington contributed to this report.

    Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump’s vow to promote in vitro fertilization by forcing health insurance companies or the federal government to pay for the treatments is at odds with the actions of much of his own party.

    Related video above: Former President Donald Trump holds town hall in battleground state of Wisconsin

    Yet his surprising announcement Thursday reveals the former president’s realization that GOP stances on abortion and reproductive rights could be huge liabilities for his chances of returning to the White House. Trump has quickly tried to reframe the narrative around those issues after Vice President Kamala Harris entered the presidential race.

    Even before he made his coverage proposal, Trump had been promoting the idea that the Republican Party is a “leader” on IVF. That characterization is rejected by Democrats, who have seized on the common but expensive fertility treatment as another dimension of reproductive rights threatened by Republicans and a second Trump presidency.

    It’s not just political partisans.

    “Republicans are not leaders on IVF,” said Katie Watson, a medical ethics professor at Northwestern’s Feinberg School of Medicine. “Some of them have posed a threat to IVF, and they’re currently trying to figure out how to be anti-abortion and pro-IVF, and there are internal inconsistencies and struggles there. It appears that the Republicans are careening to remedy the political damage that resulted from their own choices.”

    Trump’s proposal, which he announced without providing details, illustrates how reproductive rights have become central in this year’s presidential race. It’s also the latest example of the former president attempting to appear moderate on the issue, despite repeatedly boasting about appointing the three Supreme Court justices who helped overturn the constitutional right to abortion.

    Even as the Republican Party has attempted to create a national narrative that it’s receptive of in vitro fertilization, many Republicans have been left grappling with the innate tension between support for the procedure and for laws passed by their own party that grant legal personhood not only to fetuses but to any embryos that are destroyed in the IVF process.

    The messaging efforts also have been undercut by state lawmakers, Republican-dominated courts and anti-abortion leaders within the party’s ranks, as well as opposition to legislative attempts to protect IVF access.

    Ahead of the Republican National Convention in July, the Republican Party adopted a policy platform that supports states establishing fetal personhood through the Constitution’s 14th Amendment, which grants equal protection under the law to all American citizens. The platform also encourages supporting IVF but does not explain how the party plans to do so while also encouraging fetal personhood laws that would render the treatment illegal.

    In May, the Texas Republican Party’s platform committee narrowly rejected a proposal to classify embryos created through IVF as “human beings” and designate their destruction as “homicide.” A bill aimed at expanding IVF access, meanwhile, sailed through in California on Thursday, despite opposition from nearly all Republican lawmakers.

    Video below: A conversation with Elizabeth Carr, the first person born via IVF in the US

    Sen. Tammy Duckworth, a Democrat from Illinois who shared her own IVF journey on the Senate floor and co-sponsored a bill to protect the treatment, slammed Republicans for saying they support IVF in campaigning but not backing that up with their votes.

    She added that Supreme Court justices appointed by Trump “paved the way” for the fall of Roe v. Wade and the impact on reproductive rights, including access to IVF.

    “Republicans publicly claiming to be in support of IVF is absurd,” she told the AP.

    The issue burst onto the national political landscape in February after the all-Republican Alabama Supreme Court granted frozen embryos the legal rights of children. That decision forced clinics in Alabama to pause their IVF treatments, devastating patients struggling to be parents. Soon after, and facing a national backlash, Alabama’s Republican governor signed legislation shielding doctors from legal liability so IVF procedures could continue.

    In the weeks after the Alabama ruling, congressional Republicans scrambled to address IVF. Many rushed to create a unified message of support despite histories of voting in favor of fetal personhood laws and arguing that life begins at conception, the same concept that upheld the Alabama decision.

    “The reality is you cannot protect IVF and champion fetal personhood — they are fundamentally incompatible — and the American people won’t be fooled by another one of Donald Trump’s lies,” Sen. Patty Murray, a Democrat and co-sponsor of the Right to IVF bill, told The Associated Press.

    Republican Sens. Katie Britt and Ted Cruz introduced a bill this year to prohibit states from receiving Medicaid funding if they ban the procedure. But that came after Senate Republicans blocked legislation that would have made IVF a federal right. All Republicans except Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine voted against the measure.

    “It’s not easy for a Republican lawmaker to say they’re for IVF and actually mean it in a straightforward, tangible way without angering a lot of constituents,” said Mary Ruth Ziegler, a law professor at the University of California, Davis School of Law.

    An AP-NORC poll conducted in June found that more than 6 in 10 U.S. adults support protecting access to IVF, including more than half of Republicans, and only about 1 in 10 are opposed. But many anti-abortion groups and some lawmakers oppose the treatment, including several members of the right-wing Freedom Caucus who have objected to expanding IVF access for veterans.

    At least 23 bills aiming to establish fetal personhood have been introduced in 13 states so far this legislative session, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports abortion rights.

    This type of legislation, all proposed by Republican lawmakers, is based on the idea that life begins at fertilization and could imperil fertility treatments that involve the storage, transportation and destruction of embryos.

    Still, many GOP lawmakers have been vocal in their support for IVF. The issue is personal for Wisconsin Republican Sen. Ron Johnson, who shared his daughter’s IVF experience. But even though Johnson said he fully supports IVF, he was not completely sold on Trump’s proposal due to its possible price tag. Other Republican lawmakers who responded publicly after Trump’s announcement expressed similar concerns.

    “I would need to see cost estimates, impacts on insurance rates, etc., before making any decisions or commitments to support any proposal,” Johnson said.

    Republican lawmakers have historically opposed federal funding to cover health care, including by repeatedly attempting to undo the Obama-era Affordable Care Act, and may be unlikely to support similar plans, including for IVF.

    Lack of health insurance coverage for fertility treatments has been a major barrier for those wanting to start or continue treatments. While coverage has been expanding in recent years, less than half of employers with 500 or more workers in the U.S. offered IVF coverage in 2023, according to the benefits consultant Mercer.

    Republican Rep. Michelle Steel of California faced criticism for supporting a GOP bill aiming to grant constitutional protection to embryos at “the moment of fertilization” after she publicly shared her own experience with IVF. Steel rescinded her co-sponsorship of the measure in March, two days after winning her primary, declaring she does not support federal restrictions on IVF.

    In a statement to the AP, she said Congress “must pass policies to support and expand access to IVF treatments.”

    Such flip-flopping from Republicans only provides fodder for Democrats, who say Trump and his party can’t be trusted to protect reproductive rights.

    Rep. Elissa Slotkin, the Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate in Michigan, warned voters to “watch what they do, not what they say.”

    ___

    Associated Press writers Scott Bauer in Madison, Wisconsin; Tom Murphy in Indianapolis and Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux in Washington contributed to this report.

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  • Olympians Are Taking Control of Their Fertility – I Wish I’d Done the Same – POPSUGAR Australia

    Olympians Are Taking Control of Their Fertility – I Wish I’d Done the Same – POPSUGAR Australia

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    Former Olympic runner Alexi Pappas recently revealed she froze her eggs in her early 30s because she wanted to buy herself time. In an effort to empower others to be proactive to preserve their fertility, she wrote in Outside, “I encourage any woman, whether you are single or partnered, whether you think you know what you want in the next five years or you have no idea, to consider freezing your eggs.”

    Pappas isn’t the only top athlete to prioritize her fertility. Several other Olympians have followed this same proactive path, fearing age could impact their ability to build a family. This includes hurdler Lolo Jones, who froze her eggs in 2022, and four-time Olympic gold medalist in bobsledding, Kallie Humphries, who froze her eggs and underwent IVF in 2021.

    This is a growing trend among young women under 38 who are planning ahead with cryopreservation of their eggs, and according to experts, it’s the best way to ensure future motherhood. I wish I had done the same.

    When I was single in my 20s, my career and social life took priority, and I didn’t even think about trying to conceive. My mother got pregnant without any need for medical intervention, so I was surprised when my husband and I wound up struggling with infertility for a decade.

    During that time, I endured over a dozen fertility cycles, close to 40 gynecological procedures, and suffered four recurrent miscarriages in one year. Then, when I finally became pregnant with my son, I was labeled as being “advanced maternal age” and having a “geriatric pregnancy” due to being almost 40. This required additional monitoring and caused unexpected complications during pregnancy. If I’d frozen my eggs when I was younger, I would have had an easier path to motherhood.


    Experts Featured in This Article

    Jaime Knopman, MD, is an endocrinologist and the director of fertility preservation for CCRM Fertility.

    Alease Barnes, BS, is a certified embryologist and the founder of ReproMedia.


    While there are risks associated with the preservation process, this proactive method increases the likelihood of pregnancy and birth. In an NYU Langone study, 70 percent of women who yielded a rate of 20 oocytes or higher carried a child full term. The author of the study, James Grifo, MD, PhD, also indicated that multiple retrieval procedures increased success rates.

    “The earlier you freeze your eggs, the better the quality will be,” endocrinologist Jaime Knopman, MD, tells PS. “You will get more and they will have more potential for success,” Dr. Knopman adds. “I always compare them to lottery tickets. When you are young and you freeze your eggs, it’s like someone whispering the first three numbers in your ear; that increases your chances to win. As you get older, it’s as though you have no intel, so your chances of winning go down.”

    Even though she ended up raising me alone, my mother believed in the traditional values of “settling down,” getting married, then having a child. I saw firsthand how hard being a mom was after my parents divorced. It solidified my intent to wait until I had a partner to raise a family.

    I also assumed it would be easy for me to conceive, knowing my mom got pregnant right away at 22. When I was in high school and college, she advised me to protect myself using contraceptives to avoid an unwanted pregnancy, so I tried a combination of the birth control pill and condoms. I was so focused on not getting pregnant too soon, that I never even considered what to do if I couldn’t get pregnant when the time was right. That is, until I couldn’t conceive naturally on my own.

    My perspective has changed since then, based on what I know now: freezing your eggs earlier increases your chances of having a baby and could prevent exhausting and expensive procedures, not to mention the heartache of infertility and pregnancy loss.

    When I started IVF, I thought it would be a quick solution, but it didn’t work right away. It took years of IUIs and then IVF to finally have our first child. We returned to try for our second, and once again my high expectations were shattered.

    After another few years of failed cycles and recurrent miscarriages, I was thrilled to welcome my second child at 39. Due to my age, I had to be monitored by both an ob-gyn and a maternal fetal medicine doctor for the entire pregnancy. It was anxiety-inducing and I wish I would have frozen my eggs earlier; it could have prevented the prolonged treatments and factors that come with a high-risk pregnancy.

    “As we age, our eggs get worse at repairing DNA, which leads to aneuploidy, a genetic abnormality,” says embryologist Alease Barnes, BS. “Over the age of 35 our rate of chromosomal conditions such as trisomy 21, 18, and 13 rise in probability.” These conditions can result in pregnancy loss, as well as a range of disabilities including Down syndrome.

    As a result, egg freezing is becoming more common. The National Institute of Health found in January 2024 that women are “driven by feelings of fear” to freeze their eggs, which saw an increase during the pandemic. This concern is based on a number of factors, including age impacting egg quality, lack of a suitable partner, and the potential threat of access to fertility treatment.

    This approach, referred to as “social egg freezing” by the NIH, affords women the opportunity to “finish their studies, become financially stable and achieve their professional goals.” It’s no surprise then that there was a 400 percent increase in the rate of egg freezing between 2012 and 2020, according to a study in the Society of Assisted Reproductive Technology originally reported by The New York Times in 2022.

    Egg retrievals cost between $8,000 and $15,000 per cycle, while storage fees can run from $500 to $1000 per year, if you have to pay out of pocket. Some insurance plans now pay for IVF and fertility preservation coverage, depending upon your plan and the state you live in, although we should fight for more coverage. And yet, despite the financial and emotional costs, this uptick shows that more are taking control of their fertility, in hopes of having a better chance later on, once they are ready to conceive.

    While I’m grateful for my two beautiful children, I wish I could have frozen my eggs years sooner. Alexi Pappas and these other Olympians have the right idea. I urge women to consider the option of cryopreservation, as early as they can. If you can afford it, it’s worth the price to preserve your chance at motherhood.

    Related: The Complicated Reality of Bringing Millions on Your Fertility Journey


    Lisa McCarty is a writer and women’s health advocate. In addition to PS, her work has been featured by The New York Times, HuffPost, Newsweek, “Today,” and more.


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  • IVF is personal for Tim Walz and his family, as Harris touts reproductive rights

    IVF is personal for Tim Walz and his family, as Harris touts reproductive rights

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    As states and Capitol Hill debate reproductive technology like in vitro fertilization, IVF is a personal topic for Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and his wife, Gwen

    It’s because of IVF and similar fertility treatments, Walz says, that he has a family of four. Walz has spoken publicly about he and his wife’s struggles with infertility, telling the Star Tribune in March that the couple underwent IVF procedures for seven years before Gwen became pregnant with their daughter, Hope. 

    “It’s not by chance that we named our daughter Hope,” Walz told the Star Tribune. 

    The Walz family’s use of fertility treatments isn’t lost on Vice President Kamala Harris, who highlighted their fertility journey after she announced Walz as her running mate Tuesday. Harris has been a vocal advocate of reproductive technology, as well as women’s access to abortion. 

    “Governor Walz and Mrs. Walz have two children, Hope and Gus,” the Harris campaign said in a statement Tuesday. “Governor Walz and Mrs. Walz struggled with years of fertility challenges and had their daughter, Hope, through reproductive health care like IVF — further cementing his commitment to ensuring all Americans have access to this care.”

    Walz voiced concern about Americans’ access to IVF after the Alabama Supreme Court ruled in February that frozen embryos made through IVF are children under the state’s Wrongful Death of a Minor Act, sparking fears that women’s fertility treatments could be placed in jeopardy. 

    “Gwen and I have two beautiful children because of reproductive health care like IVF,” Walz wrote on Facebook after the Alabama Supreme Court ruling. “This issue is deeply personal to our family and so many others. Don’t let these guys get away with this by telling you they support IVF when their handpicked judges oppose it. Actions speak louder than words, and their actions are clear. They’re bringing anti-science government into your exam room, bedroom, and classroom.”

    IVF has been a topic of debate on Capitol Hill, too. After the Alabama Supreme Court ruling, in June the Senate voted on legislation to make IVF access a right nationally. All but two Senate Republicans voted to block the set of bills, while still insisting that they support IVF. Some Republicans called the push for the legislation a political stunt on the part of Democrats. 

    When the vote took place, Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana said the “tragic situation in Alabama has been used to fearmonger and scare that IVF is somehow in jeopardy.”

    Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance was one of the vast majority of Senate Republicans who voted against the IVF package, something the Harris campaign highlighted. 

    On July 25, “World IVF Day,” the Harris campaign said, “Happy World IVF Day to Everyone Except JD Vance.” 

    Walz also blasted Vance on World IVF Day. 

    “Even if you’ve never gone through the hell of infertility, someone you know has,” Walz wrote on social media. “When Gwen and I were having trouble getting pregnant, the anxiety and frustration blotted out the sun. JD Vance opposing the miracle of IVF is a direct attack on my family and so many others.”

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  • Amid political IVF debates, parent hopefuls struggle to afford fertility care in California

    Amid political IVF debates, parent hopefuls struggle to afford fertility care in California

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    In between chemotherapy, a double mastectomy and all the other medical appointments that come with a cancer diagnosis, Katie McKnight rushed to start the in vitro fertilization process in hopes that she could one day give birth when she recovered.

    McKnight, 34, of Richmond, Calif., was diagnosed in 2020 with a fast-spreading form of breast cancer. IVF can help boost chances of pregnancy for cancer patients concerned about the impacts of the disease and its treatment on fertility. The process involves collecting eggs from ovaries and fertilizing them with sperm in a lab, then implanting them in a uterus.

    But after having begun the process — being sedated to retrieve her eggs and paying hundreds of dollars annually to properly store the embryos made with her husband — McKnight can’t afford right now to get the embryos out of a freezer.

    Katie McKnight, 34, of Richmond, Calif., takes a photo before her first egg retrieval for IVF after a breast cancer diagnosis in 2020.

    (Katie McKnight)

    “You either have to be able to access a lot of money, or you just keep them frozen and suspended there. It’s such a weird place to be,” McKnight said earlier this month as she prepared to head into her fifth reconstructive breast surgery. “I got this far, now how am I going to finish this? How am I going to actually realize this dream?”

    California — celebrated by women’s advocates as a reproductive health haven — does not require that insurance companies cover IVF.

    McKnight, who serves on the board of Bay Area Young Survivors, a support group for young breast cancer patients, is among those lobbying for state legislation to change that. She and her husband hope to implant an embryo as soon as this year, worried that time is of the essence as her cancer has the potential to spread to her ovaries. McKnight has health insurance through her job at an environmental research nonprofit but it does not cover IVF.

    On average, IVF costs Californians at least $24,000 out of pocket, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

    Cost varies depending on treatment — patients typically require multiple rounds of IVF to be successful — and whether employers provide insurance coverage for the procedure. Twenty-seven percent of companies with more than 500 employees offered IVF insurance nationwide, according to a 2021 survey.

    Under a bill signed into law by Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom in 2019, McKnight was able to have her egg retrievals — a first step in the IVF process — covered by insurance ahead of lifesaving chemotherapy, which can cause infertility. Medical patients who face infertility because of treatment are insured under that law, but that coverage stops short of including fertilization and embryo transfer.

    A new bill has been introduced in the state Legislature this year that would require that large insurance companies provide comprehensive coverage for the treatment of infertility, including IVF.

    But the bill could be costly and faces an uphill battle as the state grapples with a multibillion-dollar budget deficit. Similar proposals have failed in the past, including an attempt last year that never made it to the governor’s desk, facing opposition by insurance companies that said new mandates would result in higher premiums for all.

    IVF is especially important to McKnight because it has allowed her through genetic testing to identify which embryos have the BRCA gene mutation, which is hereditary and significantly increases the chance of breast cancer. She has decided to discard those embryos because of concerns about passing cancer on to her children.

    An embryologist in a lab setting

    An embryologist works at the Virginia Center for Reproductive Medicine in Reston, Va., in 2019.

    (Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times)

    McKnight cried when talking about recent political debates over IVF happening nationwide after an Alabama court ruled in February that frozen embryos can be considered “children” and that those who destroy them can be held liable for wrongful death.

    The decision disrupted IVF appointments in Alabama, and state lawmakers there rushed to create legislation aimed to protect the procedure. But uncertainty remains about access amid outstanding legal questions.

    More than a dozen states have introduced “fetal personhood” protection laws this year. Those measures could potentially sweep IVF into religious arguments opposing abortion rights and stoking fears about further reproductive health restrictions after the Supreme Court’s 2022 Dobbs decision rolled back a federal abortion rights guarantee.

    “It terrifies me. It’s unfathomable to me,” McKnight said. “I do not want to put a child into this world that has to go through all of the hard stuff that I’ve lived, and I feel like that is my choice.”

    Infertility is common. According to the CDC, about 1 in 5 married women of childbearing age are unable to get pregnant after one year of trying.

    More than 11,000 babies were born in California in 2021 using assisted reproductive technology such as IVF — nearly 3% of all infants born in the state that year, according to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services.

    More than a dozen states, including New York, Arkansas and Connecticut, mandate that health plans provide some coverage for IVF.

    The American Society for Reproductive Medicine said that California — home to the most progressive abortion laws in the country — is failing to fulfill its role as a “reproductive freedom” state.

    “California still has significant work to do to ensure that all people can make personal decisions about their reproductive lives and futures. True reproductive freedom means that all people can decide if and when to start or grow a family,” the group said in a statement in support of SB 729.

    In addition to extending insurance coverage to IVF, SB 729, introduced by state Sen. Caroline Menjivar (D-Panorama City), would also redefine “infertility” in health plans, extending services to LGBTQ+ couples who don’t meet current standards to secure fertility services.

    Most health plans that do offer IVF coverage measure infertility based on whether a man and woman fail to get pregnant after a year of unprotected sex, excluding from coverage LGBTQ+ couples seeking to use fertility services to start a family.

    The new bill would broaden the definition of infertility to include “a person’s inability to reproduce either as an individual or with their partner without medical intervention.”

    The issue is personal for Menjivar. She and her wife recently chose to delay plans to start a family through fertility services such as IVF and instead buy a home, after weighing the costs. She said she has friends who have traveled to Mexico for cheaper fertility care.

    “When we talk about Alabama … we have barriers like that in California. The physical barriers exist in California, where people cannot afford this,” Menjivar said.

    Sen. Caroline Menjivar and former California Senate leader Toni Atkins.

    California Sen. Caroline Menjivar (D-Panorama City), left, and former Senate leader Toni Atkins (D-San Diego) at the state Capitol.

    (Fred Greaves / For CalMatters)

    The bill has been opposed by the California Assn. of Health Plans and a number of insurance companies that warn that such single-issue mandates lead to increased premiums for business owners and enrollees.

    According to a legislative analysis of the potential costs conducted last year, the California Health Benefit Review Program estimated employers and enrollees would spend a total of an additional $183 million in the first year of the bill’s implementation, and nearly double that the following year. California could face potentially tens of millions more in separate costs, according to that analysis, due to increases in premiums for state employees.

    “While this bill is well-intentioned, it will unintentionally exacerbate health care affordability issues,” the California Chamber of Commerce, which also opposed the bill, said in a statement.

    The latest cost estimate reflects Democrats’ attempts to narrow the bill and drive the price down, exempting small health plans, religious employers and Medi-Cal — which provides insurance to low-income Californians — from the proposed mandate to cover IVF.

    New IVF policy debates have posed a political quagmire for some Republicans who have used “personhood” arguments to oppose abortion but do not want to see IVF access encroached.

    California Assembly Republicans — some of whom are opposed to increasing abortion access — introduced a resolution last month calling on the state to declare that it “recognizes and protects” access to IVF for women “struggling with fertility issues” and encouraged the same at the federal level. The resolution also calls on Alabama to overturn its ruling.

    “IVF has helped so many families actually have children so we need to make sure we’re protecting access to it,” said Assemblymember Josh Hoover (R-Folsom), who co-authored Assembly Concurrent Resolution 154. “We can’t go backward on IVF.”

    But several state Republicans who support that resolution opposed last year’s attempt to insure IVF in California.

    The insurance bill did not make it to the Assembly last year, and Hoover said he is unsure of how he will vote if it makes it to his house this year, voicing skepticism about the costs to small-business owners and taxpayers.

    For Democrats like Menjivar, the Republican-led resolution — which specifies that IVF is for women struggling with fertility issues and does not mention LGBTQ+ families — is viewed as a farce.

    “It’s all talk,” she said. “This does absolutely nothing, there’s no meat to it whatsoever.”

    Menjivar said that she will not support that resolution without changes. She is angry about “hypocrisy” she’s seen from Republicans nationwide who she believes voted for antiabortion policies that have led to the IVF problems arising now.

    “They made their bed and they’re trying to squirm out of it and they’re getting stuck,” she said.

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  • The People Rooting for the End of IVF

    The People Rooting for the End of IVF

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    Updated at 4:10 p.m. ET on March 11, 2024

    Chaos reigns in Alabama—or at least in the Alabama world of reproductive health. Three weeks ago, the state’s supreme court ruled that embryos should be treated as children, thrusting the future of in vitro fertilization, and of thousands of would-be Alabama parents, into uncertainty. Last week, state lawmakers scrambled to pass a legislative fix to protect the right of prospective parents to seek IVF, but they did so without addressing the court’s existential questions about personhood.

    Meanwhile, those in the wider anti-abortion movement who oppose IVF are feeling hopeful. Whatever the outcome in Alabama, the situation has yanked the issue “into the public consciousness” nationwide, Aaron Kheriaty, a fellow at the conservative Ethics and Public Policy Center, told me. He and his allies object to IVF for the same reason that they object to abortion: Both procedures result, they believe, in the destruction of innocent life. And in an America without federal abortion protections, in which states will continue to redefine and recategorize what qualifies as life, more citizens will soon encounter what Kheriaty considers the moral hazards of IVF.

    In his ideal world, the anti-abortion movement would make ending IVF its new goal—the next frontier in a post-Roe society. The problem, of course, is that crossing that frontier will be bumpy, to say the least. IVF is extremely popular, and banning it is not—something President Joe Biden made a point of highlighting in his State of the Union speech last week. (A full 86 percent of Americans support keeping it legal, according to the latest polling.) “Even a lot of pro-lifers don’t want to touch this issue,” Kheriaty acknowledged. “It’s almost easier to talk about abortion.” But he and his allies see the Alabama ruling as a chance to start a national conversation about the morality of IVF—even if, at first, Americans don’t want to listen.

    After all, their movement has already won another unpopular, decades-long fight: With patience and dedication, pro-life activists succeeded in transforming abortion rights from a niche issue in religious circles to a mainstream cause—eventually making opposition to Roe a litmus test for Republican candidates. Perhaps, the thinking goes, pro-lifers could achieve the same with IVF.

    The typical IVF procedure goes like this: A doctor retrieves a number of eggs from a woman’s ovaries—maybe eight to 10—and fertilizes them with sperm in laboratory conditions. The fertilized eggs will grow in the lab for a few days, before one or more embryos will be selected for transfer to the woman’s uterus. A patient using IVF to get pregnant will likely have several embryos left over, and it’s up to the patient whether those extras are discarded, frozen for future use, or donated, either to research or to another couple.

    In the Alabama case, three couples were storing frozen embryos at an IVF clinic, where they were mistakenly destroyed. When the couples sued the clinic in a civil trial for the wrongful death of a child, the state supreme court ruled that they were entitled to damages, declaring in a novel interpretation of Alabama law that embryos qualify as children. The public’s response to the ruling can perhaps best be described as panicked. Two of the state’s major in-vitro-fertilization clinics immediately paused operations, citing uncertain legal liability, which disrupted many couples’ medical treatments and forced some out of state for care. Lawmakers across the country raced to clarify their position.

    But the ruling shouldn’t have come as such a shock, at least to the pro-life community. After all, “it’s a very morally consistent outcome” with what anti-abortion advocates have long argued—that life begins at conception—Andrew T. Walker, an ethics and public-theology professor at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, told me: “It’s the culmination of other pro-life arguments about human dignity, brought to the IVF domain.”

    The central criticism of IVF from Walker and others who share his opinion concerns the destruction of extra embryos, which they view as fully human. For some people, a degree of cognitive dissociation is required to look at a tiny embryo and see a human baby, which is a point that IVF defenders commonly make. (“I would invite them to try to change the diaper of an in vitro–fertilized egg,” Sean Tipton, the chief advocacy and policy officer at the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, told me. More soberly, Kate Devine, the medical director of US Fertility, a network of reproduction-focused practices, told me that referring to an embryo as a baby “is unjust and inaccurate and threatens to withhold highly efficacious family-building treatments from people affected by the disease of infertility.”)

    To IVF critics, however, an embryo is just a very young person. “The only real difference between those frozen embryos and me sitting here having this conversation with you is time,” Katy Faust, the president of the anti-abortion nonprofit Them Before Us, told me. “If you believe that children have a right to life, and that life begins at conception, then ‘Big Fertility’ as an industry is responsible for more child deaths than the abortion industry.” Faust’s organization argues from a “children’s rights” perspective, meaning it also believes that IVF is wrong, in part, because it allows single women and homosexual couples to have babies, which deprives children of having both a mother and a father.

    This leads to the other major criticism of IVF: that the process itself is so unnatural that it devalues sex and treats children as a commodity. The argument to which many religious Americans subscribe is that having children is a “cooperative act among husband, wife, and God himself,” John M. Haas, a former president of the National Catholic Bioethics Center, has written. “Children, in the final analysis, should be begotten not made.” The secular version of that opinion is that IVF poses all kinds of thorny bioethical quandaries, including questions about the implications of preimplantation genetic testing and the selection for sex and other traits. When a doctor takes babies “out of the normal process of conception, lines them up in a row, and picks which is the best baby, that brings a eugenicist mindset into it that’s really destructive,” Leah Sargeant, a Catholic writer, told me. “There are big moral complications and red flags that aren’t being treated as such.”

    She and the others believe that now is the time to stop ignoring those red flags. The Alabama Supreme Court has offered a chance to teach people about IVF—and the implications they may not yet be aware of. Some couples who’ve undergone IVF don’t even consider the consequences “until they themselves have seven [extra] frozen embryos,” Faust said, “and now they go, ‘Oh, shit, what do we do?’” The more Americans learn about IVF, the less they’ll use it, opponents argue, just as Americans have broadly moved away from international adoption for ethical reasons. Walker would advise faith leaders to counsel couples against the process. “As I’ve talked with people, they’ve come around,” he said.

    The IVF opponents I interviewed all made clear that they sympathize with couples struggling with infertility. But they also believe that not all couples will be able to have biological children. “Not every way of pursuing children turns out to be a good way,” Sargeant said; people will have to accept that “you don’t have total control over whether you get one.”

    None of these arguments is going to be an applause line for anti-IVF campaigners in most parts of the country. “I know that my view is deeply unpopular,” Walker told me, with a laugh. The Alabama ruling left Republicans in disarray: Even some hard-line social conservatives in Congress, including House Speaker Mike Johnson, have tried to distance themselves from it, arguing that they oppose abortion but support IVF from a natalist position. Democrats, meanwhile, are already using the issue as a wedge: If, in the lead-up to the 2024 election, they can connect Republicans’ support for Dobbs to the possible end of IVF, they’ll have an even easier job painting the GOP as extreme on reproductive health and out of touch with the average American voter.

    Even so, the anti-IVF people I interviewed say, at least Americans would be talking about it. Talking, they believe, is the beginning of persuasion. And they’re prepared to be patient.

    Earlier this week, Kheriaty texted me with what he seems to take as evidence that his movement is already making progress. He sent a comment he’d gotten from a reader in response to his latest column about the perils of IVF. “This troubling dilemma wasn’t on top of mind when we embarked on our IVF path,” the reader had written. The clinic had explained what would happen to their unused embryos, the woman said, but she hadn’t realized the issue “would loom” so heavily over her afterward.


    This article originally identified John M. Haas as the president of the National Catholic Bioethics Center; in fact, he is a former president of the center.

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  • Sen. Katie Britt delivers Republican rebuttal to State of the Union address

    Sen. Katie Britt delivers Republican rebuttal to State of the Union address

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    Sen. Katie Britt delivers Republican rebuttal to State of the Union address – CBS News


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    Republican Sen. Katie Britt of Alabama delivered her party’s response to President Biden’s State of the Union address Thursday night, in emotional remarks from her kitchen. “CBS Evening News” anchor and managing editor Norah O’Donnell leads a panel to break down Britt’s speech.

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  • How does IVF work? The medicine behind in vitro fertilization, explained by an expert

    How does IVF work? The medicine behind in vitro fertilization, explained by an expert

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    Heidi Collins Fantasia is an associate professor of nursing at University of Massachusetts, Lowell.


    Since the overturning of Roe v. Wade in June 2022 ended the federal right to abortion, legislative attention has extended to many other aspects of reproductive rights, including access to assisted reproductive technologies such as in vitro fertilization, or IVF, after an Alabama Supreme Court ruling in February 2024.

    University of Massachusetts, Lowell associate professor and department chair of the school of nursing Heidi Collins Fantasia explains how this decades-old procedure works and what its tenuous legal status means for prospective parents.

    What is IVF?

    IVF is a type of artificial reproductive technology that allows people with a range of fertility issues to conceive a child. It involves fertilizing an egg with sperm outside the body to form an embryo that is then transferred into the uterus to develop.

    IVF is used as a treatment for infertility, which the American Society for Reproductive Medicine defines as an inability to achieve pregnancy “based on a patient’s medical, sexual, and reproductive history, age, physical findings, diagnostic testing” or the “need for medical intervention.”

    While originally developed as a fertility treatment for blocked fallopian tubes, IVF is currently used for other conditions such as low sperm count or when the cause for infertility can’t be determined. LGBTQ people and single parents can also use IVF and other reproductive technologies to grow their families.

    How does IVF work?

    Typically during IVF, a patient takes hormones to stimulate the ovaries to produce eggs. Once a health professional retrieves the eggs using an ultrasound and a thin needle, they either incubate the sperm with the egg or inject the sperm into the egg in the lab to fertilize it. Which specific type of IVF procedure a patient undergoes is determined on an individual basis with a health care provider.

    Scientists began to develop IVF in the 1930s, beginning with the live birth of rabbits and mice through the procedure. This research eventually led to the birth of the first “test-tube baby” in 1978. Physiologist Robert Edwards received the 2010 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine for his research on IVF.

    World's First IVF Baby Reaches 40
    In 1978, Louise Brown, pictured here in 2018, became the first baby to be born using IVF. 

    LEON NEAL / Getty Images


    The technology has rapidly expanded since the first live human birth from IVF. The development of cryopreservation, or the freezing of human eggs and embryos, has enabled people to pursue pregnancy later in life. Genetic screening of cells from a developing embryo can identify genetic diseases and abnormalities.

    The chance of a successful live birth through assisted reproductive technologies varies. Success rates depend on many factors, such as underlying cause of infertility, age and type of technology used.

    Who currently has access to IVF?

    Use of IVF has steadily increased since it was first introduced. In 2015, about 2% of all infants in the U.S. were conceived as a result of IVF, and public support for IVF is high overall.

    Approximately 10% of women in the U.S. have used some type of fertility service to achieve a pregnancy. This includes fertility advice, medications to increase ovulation, fertility testing, surgery and IVF.

    Because infertility increases with age, women older than 35 typically use these services more often than younger women. Women in the U.S. who access infertility care the least are often non-U.S. citizens and uninsured, and they typically have lower income and less education than women who do.

    Differences in geography also affect IVF access. In 2021, over 5% of all infants in Massachusetts were conceived from IVF, but this dropped to less than 1% in New Mexico, Arkansas and Mississippi.

    Service availability and insurance coverage for IVF procedures differ by state, which could account for some of the differences in use. Only a small number of states mandate that private insurers cover IVF. Public insurance coverage for infertility services is even lower.

    The cost of IVF has been the greatest barrier to infertility care. Out-of-pocket costs for people without insurance coverage can range from over US$10,000 to $25,000 per cycle, with rising costs per cycle.

    How do debates about when life begins affect IVF?

    Political views vary around reproductive rights, and access to IVF is likely to become an issue in upcoming election cycles.

    The Alabama Supreme Court ruled in February 2024 that frozen embryos created during the process of IVF were people. While the ruling currently applies only to Alabama, it has caused shock, confusion and concern among health care providers.

    As a result of the ruling, two major IVF providers in Alabama have paused infertility care because of potential legal risk to health care providers. The main concern is whether providers can be held liable for wrongful death if frozen embryos don’t survive the thawing process.

    Since the elimination of federal protection of abortion in 2022 with the overturning of Roe v. Wade, individual states have made their own laws regarding abortion access. Many patients, health care providers, researchers and legislators see the Alabama decision regarding IVF as a continuation of the increasing erosion of women’s reproductive rights.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

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  • Alabama’s Supreme Court declared embryos are children. It could happen in NC | Opinion

    Alabama’s Supreme Court declared embryos are children. It could happen in NC | Opinion

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    OPINION AND COMMENTARY

    Editorials and other Opinion content offer perspectives on issues important to our community and are independent from the work of our newsroom reporters.

    Nancy DeSisto, right, and Karin Sisk talk during the national “STOP THE BANS” day of action at the South Carolina Statehouse, Tuesday, May 21, 2019, in Columbia, S.C. The rally was one many held in all fifty states on Tuesday in response top recent state bans on abortion.

    Nancy DeSisto, right, and Karin Sisk talk during the national “STOP THE BANS” day of action at the South Carolina Statehouse, Tuesday, May 21, 2019, in Columbia, S.C. The rally was one many held in all fifty states on Tuesday in response top recent state bans on abortion.

    online@thestate.com

    The Alabama Supreme Court made an unprecedented and potentially pivotal decision last week when it declared that frozen embryos are children in the eyes of the law.

    It raises concerns about the future of infertility treatment in Alabama and possibly across the country, as other state courts could use the Alabama case as precedent in similar decisions. Already, hospitals and clinics across Alabama have begun pausing IVF treatments, citing new legal risks to providers due to the decision.

    But the consequences of the ruling could extend beyond IVF, beginning a new front in the fight over reproductive rights and freedom.

    The ruling gives credence to the concept of “fetal personhood,” which has been a goal of the anti-abortion movement in the United States for decades. So-called fetal personhood laws would grant fetuses the same rights and protections of any born person. Under such laws, abortion could then be considered murder, and therefore outlawed entirely.

    What is the likelihood of something like that happening in, say, North Carolina? Maxine Eichner, Graham Kenan Distinguished Professor of Law at the UNC School of Law, said it’s not entirely out of the question, especially with a state Supreme Court that acts increasingly political.

    While experts like Eichner believe that the end goal of the fetal personhood movement is to ultimately outlaw abortion, it’s being done gradually, in cases that have nothing to do with abortion at all. In Alabama, the decision stemmed from wrongful death lawsuits brought by couples whose frozen embryos were destroyed in an accident at a fertility clinic. Alabama has a law that allows parents to sue over the death of a minor child, and the court ruled that “minor child” includes unborn children, even embryos.

    “Given the politics and the tremendous amount of resistance that surrounded removing the right to choose abortion folks who are seeking to restrict abortion are being a little more cautious, and you get a more gradual movement towards restricting abortion based on the idea of fetal personhood,” Eichner said.

    Sympathy for the idea of “fetal personhood” already exists in North Carolina. Eichner pointed to a North Carolina Court of Appeals ruling from October that declared that “life begins at conception.” The case in question terminated a mother’s parental rights for conduct during her pregnancy. The ruling was later withdrawn, but Eichner says it still represents a disturbing attempt to insert fetal personhood into the law.

    As with the Alabama ruling, what makes it particularly concerning is that it’s not the legislature injecting fetal personhood into the law, Eichner said. Rather, judges are moving out in front of the legislature and expanding the definition of a “child” themselves.

    In South Carolina, the idea of fetal personhood is already somewhat present in the law. South Carolina is one of several states — including Alabama — where the actions of pregnant people are criminalized. An investigation published last year by The Marshall Project and The Post & Courier found that hundreds of South Carolina women have been charged unlawful neglect of a child or homicide by child abuse for alleged drug use during pregnancy, because the state Supreme Court has ruled that child abuse laws extend to a viable fetus. South Carolina legislators have tried in recent years to officially enshrine fetal personhood in the law, effectively banning all abortions in the state, but haven’t been successful.

    Of course, these gradual steps toward fetal personhood are still receiving political pushback, so it’s hard to say whether the anti-abortion movement will ever find success in taking it further. The Alabama decision has even received criticism from Republicans, not least because restricting IVF is even more politically unpopular than restricting abortions. Former President Donald Trump said he “strongly supports” IVF and called on Alabama lawmakers to find a solution to preserve the availability of IVF in the state. Meanwhile, U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace of South Carolina suggested that some House Republicans are looking at federal legislation to protect access to IVF.

    “I tell my students Dobbs is like the Wild West,” Eichner said. “We’ve removed this settled law and now it’s very difficult to know what issues are gonna come up next, because things are changing by the minute.”

    Paige Masten is the deputy opinion editor for The Charlotte Observer. She covers stories that impact people in Charlotte and across the state. A lifelong North Carolinian, she grew up in Raleigh and graduated from UNC-Chapel Hill in 2021.
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    Paige Masten

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  • Democrats Push Reality as Republicans Try to Gaslight Country About IVF

    Democrats Push Reality as Republicans Try to Gaslight Country About IVF

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    Democrats are not just sitting by as Republicans try to gaslight Americans about the inevitable consequences of their anti-abortion laws.

    It wasn’t just Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D-MI) who took down the Republican attempts to backtrack on their attacks on IVF and reproductive rights.

    Senator Tammy Duckworth tied Republican attacks on IVF to their anti-abortion rhetoric that led to the overturning of Roe.

    “I’ve been talking about this since 2018 when it was very clear that Republicans were working to eliminate women’s reproductive rights,” Duckworth said on ABC’s This Week. “I said, if Neil Gorsuch gets put on the Supreme Court, if Amy Coney Barrett gets put on the Supreme Court, we’re gonna have an erosion of Roe v. Wade. And even back in 2018, I said IVF is next. They’ve said they’re coming for IVF. So unfortunately, I wasn’t surprised.”

    Jen Klein, Director of the White House Gender Policy Council, wasn’t having it either. “Women in this country are being denied access to emergency rooms when they’re in the middle of having an emergency, whether they need an abortion or they’re having a miscarriage,” Klein said on MSNBC’s The Weekend.

    “What just happened in Alabama is fertility clinics are now closed. They are unsure what to do. And these are people who desperately want a family, who desperately want a child – and now are unsure if that is legal to do in their state,” Klein added.

    How we got here:

    Problems for Republicans started when a survey “found that 86% of all respondents supported access to IVF, with 78% support among self-identified ‘pro-life advocates’ and 83% among Evangelical Christians.

    After the strong reaction against the Alabama ruling against IVF based on the Republican argument used to overturn Roe v Wade by a conservative Supreme Court, Republicans were told to get out there and deny deny deny. They were told to express support for IVF.

    The Senate Republican campaign arm memo urging members to come out in support of IVF came just “three days after the Alabama Supreme Court ruled that frozen embryos used in IVF are children and have legal protections under the state’s ‘personhood’ laws.”

    And Republicans are doing just that, ignoring their own records to do so.

    Here’s how that’s going: Rep. Byron Donalds says IVF is important because it helps couples “breed.”

    Republicans are trying to run away from their own policies

    What is behind all of this is the conservative notion of “personhood” attributed, but only when convenient, to embryos. There are many obvious ramifications from this unfounded belief, which Republicans have been well aware of for at least 20 years, so denial at this point beggars belief.

    The bottom line is if “life begins at conception” as they argue, then embryos are human beings. The Alabama ruling allowed parents to sue for wrongful death of their frozen embryos.

    This caused several fertilization clinics to cease their work, out of concern that they “could be held liable for embryos that are destroyed or lost.” The Alabama AG then tried to reassure everyone that he won’t prosecute IVF clinics and families.

    However, the Alabama Supreme Court referred to IVF cryotanks where embryos are stored as “cryogenic nurser(ies).” That would certainly give pause to anyone concerned about legal liability.

    Logically, there is no way out of this one: It’s either one way or the other. Republicans can equivocate about in utero versus in an IVF lab, but that argument undercuts their entire premise. Either life beings at conception or it does not.

    Oh, and by the way, we all saw this coming. It is the inevitable next step of their premise, which has no medical or scientific foundation. If only Republicans hadn’t overturned Roe, their illogical attacks on freedom could have flown largely under the radar.

    A Special Message From PoliticusUSA

    If you are in a position to donate purely to help us keep the doors open on PoliticusUSA during what is a critical election year, please do so here. 

    We have been honored to be able to put your interests first for 14 years as we only answer to our readers and we will not compromise on that fundamental, core PoliticusUSA value.

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  • The Jim Crow Era of Reproductive Freedom, Plus Tiffany Haddish’s Israel Trip

    The Jim Crow Era of Reproductive Freedom, Plus Tiffany Haddish’s Israel Trip

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    Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay discuss the Alabama Supreme Court ruling that’s resulted in the halting of IVF treatments (5:18), before reacting to Tiffany Haddish’s trip to Israel (20:41). Then they break down a viral TikTok account called Biracial Lounge (38:16) before welcoming the founder of the X for Boys Life Preparatory School, King Randall I, to discuss a recent post on safety during police interactions (47:33).

    Hosts: Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay
    Guest: King Randall I
    Producers: Donnie Beacham Jr. and Ashleigh Smith

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher

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    Rachel Lindsay

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  • Vice President Harris blames Trump for Alabama IVF ruling

    Vice President Harris blames Trump for Alabama IVF ruling

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    Vice President Harris blames Trump for Alabama IVF ruling – CBS News


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    Campaigning Thursday in Michigan, Vice President Harris blamed the Alabama Supreme Court embryo ruling squarely on Donald Trump. CBS News’ Caitlin Huey-Burns and Robert Costa have more.

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    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


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  • 2/21: CBS Evening News

    2/21: CBS Evening News

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    2/21: CBS Evening News – CBS News


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    Alabama hospital pauses IVF treatment after embryo ruling; Insulin still unaffordable to some after price caps

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    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


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  • Cheryl Scott’s fertility journey, egg freezing let her take reproductive future into own hands

    Cheryl Scott’s fertility journey, egg freezing let her take reproductive future into own hands

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — A growing number of American women are taking their reproductive future into their own hands, including our own Cheryl Scott.

    As part of her fertility journey, Scott underwent the process of freezing her eggs twice. It’s a long, exhausting and emotional experience, but it’s also one more and more women are going through.

    Scott made the decision to freeze her eggs in February 2023. Along the way she chose to document and share her journey so that other women know they’re not alone.

    And they’re not; a record number of women are choosing to freeze their eggs in preparation for a fertility journey at a later date.

    “I think the reason it’s skyrocketed is because women know this is an opportunity, and it’s something they can do.,” said Dr. Emily Jungheim of Northwestern Medicine. “It works.”

    More women are freezing their eggs

    In 2021, 25,000 egg freezing procedures were performed in the United States, up more than 31% form the year before. It’s not an inexpensive procedure; it can cost anywhere from $5,000 to $10,000 a cycle.

    Despite that, more women are choosing to make the investment and more employers and insurance companies are offering coverage for fertility treatments.

    “When you can freeze an egg, you freeze time. It allows you to get pregnant at a much higher rate if you freeze when you’re younger. Less miscarriages, healthier babies,” said Dr. Brian Kaplan, reproductive endocrinologist. “You need more eggs frozen, ideally, the older you are, because there’s going to be higher attrition. And between 29 and 39, that drop off is dramatic.”

    Scott is in her late 30s. While she said she wishes she froze her eggs sooner, she landed her dream job and chose to focus on her career. Dr. Kaplan, her reproductive endocrinologist, assured her she still has time.

    How does egg freezing and retrieval work?

    So she started the process. Each egg retrieval cycle involves about two weeks of hormone shots taken every night to stimulate the follicles in the ovaries.

    “In a natural cycle, you only develop one follicle on your ovary, with potentially one egg. What we need to do is get as many of those follicles, as many eggs as we can,” Kaplan explained.

    Along the way were appointments for bloodwork, and ultrasounds to monitor the shots’ progress.

    After two long, uncomfortable weeks there is then a “trigger shot” to prep the body to release eggs at just the right time.

    Thirty-six hours later, it’s time for egg retrieval.

    The actual retrieval is a short surgery performed under sedation. The eggs are then taken to the lab for evaluation and freezing.

    While it was a tough process to go through, Scott said she feels proud and empowered to have made the choice to freeze her eggs.

    While there is no guarantee this will result in a future baby, it does increase her chances of having children if her fertility is affected in the future.

    Copyright © 2024 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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  • Kourtney Kardashian Says Pregnancy Was ‘God’s Plan’ – She & Travis Barker Had STOPPED Trying! – Perez Hilton

    Kourtney Kardashian Says Pregnancy Was ‘God’s Plan’ – She & Travis Barker Had STOPPED Trying! – Perez Hilton

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    We knew Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker had conceived their baby naturally, after quitting IVF. But it turns out they did it without even trying!

    On this week’s episode of Hulu‘s The Kardashians, Kourt opened up about getting pregnant — aptly timed considering she just gave birth to son Rocky Barker at the beginning of this month.

    Video: North West DESTROYED Pete Davidson’s Met Gala Look!

    She expressed in a confessional:

    “So much love, so much prayer went into this, and I just couldn’t be happier for this blessing. It happened on Valentine’s Day. I mean, people would always say to us, ‘When you stop trying, it’s just going to happen.’”

    And that’s exactly what happened! They had legit QUIT trying, deciding it wasn’t something they were going to have!

    “We stopped doing IVF probably two months before our wedding and so it took a year for all those hormones and chemicals to get out of my system. We were not trying whatsoever. I wasn’t even checking my ovulation anymore. We decided to put it in God’s hands and thought it was just not happening. We were accepting of it and then… God’s plan.”

    Wow. Kourtney added later how much it “truly feels like a miracle being able to be pregnant and have a baby with the love of my life.” And on Valentine’s Day! For a Halloween baby! Without even trying! Feels like fate to us!

    What do YOU think, Perezcious readers? Do you think the trick is NOT trying?? Let go and let God? Or were they always going to have a baby no matter what??

    [Image via The Kardashians on Hulu/YouTube.]

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    Perez Hilton

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  • Wife threatens divorce over $1 million housing purchase for relatives

    Wife threatens divorce over $1 million housing purchase for relatives

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    When one thinks of marital disputes, issues like communication, intimacy, or day-to-day squabbles might come to mind. However, for one woman, her husband’s impulsive financial decisions may be the last straw in their relationship.

    The woman and her husband, both successful professionals, had their financial situation sorted—until familial obligations kicked in. The husband’s mother and sister, whom the wife alleges have a history of financial recklessness and entitlement, found themselves in a predicament. They were being evicted from their current home and desired to purchase property in one of America’s priciest markets.

    Despite having no concrete repayment plan, they requested the husband co-sign on a million-dollar house. The wife, apprehensive about the idea, thought her concerns were heard when her husband assured her he wouldn’t go ahead with the deal. Yet, she later discovered he did the exact opposite.

    Newsweek did not immediately get a response from the wife or husband in this situation.

    The Gravity of Co-Signing

    Detroit realtor Dominique Morgan spoke to Newsweek on the gravity of co-signing, saying, “The co-signer is left with the debt if the applicant defaults on payments.” She adds that family complications and credit issues can arise. While co-signing among family members isn’t uncommon, Morgan said there is a need for contracts to safeguard both parties.

    But what about the legality of one spouse making such a huge financial decision without the other’s consent?

    Susan Gurthie, a Chicago-based divorce attorney and podcast host, offered Newsweek some clarity. “The husband has exposed any jointly held or solely held assets to cover his family debt,” Gurthie explains. She goes on to describe that in the event of a divorce, the co-signed loan could be considered joint debt, even though the wife objected.

    Gurthie’s advice to the wife is immediate: “Consult with an attorney.” She adds, “This breach of trust is the sort of thing that leads people to divorce and may be hard for the couple to overcome.”

    Broader Implications

    Such personal stories expose the mess that can develop between finance, trust, and marital relationships. The fact that the wife found out about the significant decision post-facto, and during an already emotionally charged time—they are in the midst of IVF treatments—adds layers of complexity.

    While many empathize with the wife’s feelings of betrayal, others on the Reddit post argue that the husband might’ve acted out of obligation and genuine concern for his family. What’s undeniable is that financial transparency and mutual decision-making are foundational in marriages.

    While money can be earned back, lost trust may be irretrievable.

    Has a loved one ever made an investment you disagreed with? Let us know. Contact Aj Fabino at a.fabino@newsweek.com.

    A tug-of-war-style “Divorce” machine is seen in the “Novelty Automation” gallery on February 15, 2017, in London, England. A wife is upset after her husband co-signed for a $1 million house behind her back.
    Leon Neal/Leon Neal/Getty Images