The Daily Telegraph

Couples denied IVF if one partner already has a child

- By Lizzie Roberts

COUPLES in two thirds of NHS regions are being denied IVF treatment if one of them has a child from a previous relationsh­ip, according to a report.

Analysis of the policies of England’s 135 clinical commission­ing groups reveals that 88 (65 per cent) deem a couple as ineligible for IVF if one person already has a child.

The policy, discovered through freedom of informatio­n requests by the British Pregnancy Advisory Service, is in contrast to National Institute of Health and Care Excellence guidelines.

Its guidance on fertility care for women aged 40 to 42 states: “The existence of living children should not be a factor that precludes the provision of fertility treatment.”

Marta Jansa Perez, director of embryology at the British Pregnancy Advisory Service, said it was an “arbitrary rule that is being used by clinical com- missioning groups to ration services”.

“The consequenc­e is that people desperate to become parents will be denied that opportunit­y because their partner already has a child, and one can only imagine the huge strain it could place on a relationsh­ip,” Ms Jansa Perez said.

“No other medical treatment would be withheld on the basis of non-clinical factors in this way.”

Della Waterfield was denied IVF because her partner, Dean Parker, had a daughter from a previous relationsh­ip. “This absolutely broke my heart. I already felt inadequate as a woman not being able to get pregnant and to have this thrown at us turned our world upside down,” she said.

“We were already aware of the postcode lottery surroundin­g IVF treatment down to the number of cycles offered in different areas, but we never once thought that Dean having a child would affect us getting at least one funded round.”

Ms Waterfield has a condition known as PCOS (polycystic ovarian syndrome) which can have an impact on a woman’s chances of conceiving.

After being turned down for funded treatment, and unable to finance a private round of IVF, the couple were forced to start a fundraisin­g page to pay for private care.

“It has put a lot of added pressure on us as a couple, as it’s hard enough without being discrimina­ted against for something completely out of our control,” she said.

The investigat­ion into the “IVF postcode lottery” also revealed that women living in 24 clinical commission­ing group areas are required to prove they are in a “stable relationsh­ip” to be given IVF funding.

In most cases, this had to be proved by the length of the relationsh­ip, with commission­ing groups specifying couples should have been together for at least two years, the British Pregnancy Advisory Service said.

Older women are also being excluded from treatment, which is contrary to clinical guidelines.

One in seven (14 commission­ing groups) does not offer fertility services to women aged over 35, and 20 groups have age cut-off points between 37 and 39, the report found.

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