Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Abortion bans worry IVF patients, doctors say

Lack of legal exceptions could place limitation­s on parts of process

- Christine Fernando Contributi­ng: Trevor Hughes, USA TODAY

Since Roe v. Wade was overturned, hundreds of frantic phone calls have poured into fertility centers across the nation from patients worried not about abortion access but about their frozen embryos.

Patients are contacting doctors to discuss the legal status of fertilized embryos and decide if to move them to states with looser abortion restrictio­ns, said Jennifer Hirshfeld-Cytron, vice president at Fertility Centers of Illinois.

“There’s so much unknown that it creates a great sense of uncertaint­y.”

The growing concerns come as some abortion laws and bills moving through legislatur­es, including in Kansas and Wyoming, threaten to jeopardize access to in vitro fertilizat­ion, a type of assisted reproducti­ve technology.

Bills defining life as beginning at fertilizat­ion or that give embryos legal rights may limit people’s control over how their embryos are used, said Seema Mohapatra, a health law professor at SMU Dedman School of Law in Dallas.

This is “more of a future concern,” she said, though “unfortunat­ely, states are moving fast, so there is reason to be worried.”

At Pacific Northwest Fertility in Seattle, reproducti­ve endocrinol­ogist Dr. Lora Shahine said her office got a wave of phone calls from fertility patients wanting to move embryos there. She said there is an increased cost, complexity and risk of damage to embryos associated with moving them because of the possible threat to IVF access.

“When politician­s are making these laws, they don’t understand the longterm impact they’re having on all reproducti­ve health care, including IVF,” said Shahine, a founding member of Doctors for Fertility, which supports IVF and reproducti­ve care access. “It’s a much bigger issue than people realize.”

Amid “growing uncertaint­y about legal protection­s” for IVF, TMRW Life Scibiology, ences, a technology company that stores frozen eggs and embryos, is getting requests to move eggs and embryos to New York, said Lindsay Beck, the company’s chief impact officer.

“It’s incredibly demoralizi­ng for physicians and patients,” Hirshfeld-Cytron said. “It creates an incredible sense of despair. And for fertility patients, this is already such a stressful, costly process.”

What is IVF?

IVF is a common process by which people get pregnant and is responsibl­e for about 84,000 babies a year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 2020, at least 600,000 frozen embryos were in storage nationwide, the Department of Health and Human Services said.

The process often is used by couples having trouble conceiving, LGBTQ couples and people trying to prevent passing on terminal genetic illness or high risks of cancer to children, HirshfeldC­ytron said.

IVF can easily cost $20,000 each try. A growing number of bills define life as beginning at fertilizat­ion or give embryos legal rights through “personhood bills,” Mohapatra said.

Most recently, a Kansas bill that criminaliz­es “unlawful destructio­n of a fertilized embryo” advanced to the state’s Senate this month. A Wyoming bill introduced last month and moved to a legislativ­e committee would assert that life begins at conception.

Many of these abortion bans and proposals don’t include exceptions for IVF, raising concerns over whether they could limit parts of the IVF process, including potentiall­y removing embryos that fail to implant in the uterus or disposing of unused embryos. This may make IVF less effective, more expensive and less accessible, Mohapatra said.

“The people making these potential laws don’t understand the science or the and they don’t have the sophistica­tion of scientific knowledge to even really answer our questions,” HirshfeldC­ytron said. “That’s a scary place to be, to have politician­s with a high school level of science describing to us how we should restrict medical care.”

What IVF patients can do

Mohapatra said that if she had embryos “in a state that does not explicitly protect abortion rights,” she would move them. Doing so does come with added cost and a small risk that something could happen to the embryos during transit, she said.

Shahine recommende­d patients stay in touch with clinics and doctors. She said patients can stay up to date through groups Doctors for Fertility, Resolve and American Society for Reproducti­ve Medicine.

 ?? IVAN COURONNE/AFP, GETTY IMAGES ?? In this 2019 photo, an embryologi­st shows an ovocyte after inseminati­on. Growing concerns rise as some abortion laws and bills move through legislatur­es that could jeopardize access to in vitro fertilizat­ion.
IVAN COURONNE/AFP, GETTY IMAGES In this 2019 photo, an embryologi­st shows an ovocyte after inseminati­on. Growing concerns rise as some abortion laws and bills move through legislatur­es that could jeopardize access to in vitro fertilizat­ion.

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