The Maui News

Alabama legislatio­n to protect IVF providers moves toward final approval

- By KIM CHANDLER

MONTGOMERY, Ala.—Alabama lawmakers racing to restart in vitro fertilizat­ion services in the state began final debate Wednesday on legislatio­n shielding providers from the fallout of a court ruling that equated frozen embryos to children.

The measure would protect providers from lawsuits and criminal prosecutio­n for the “damage or death of an embryo” during IVF services. The state’s three major IVF providers paused services after the Alabama Supreme Court’s ruling last month because of the sweeping liability concerns it raised.

The House of Representa­tives voted 81-12 for the bill that now returns to the Alabama Senate. Legislator­s have fast-tracked the immunity legislatio­n as a proposed solution to get clinics open while they weigh whether additional action is needed. If the legislatio­n passes, it will go to Gov. Kay Ivey to be signed into law, possibly the same evening.

“My goal is to get these clinics back open and women going through their treatment,” said Republican Sen. Tim Melson, the sponsor of the bill.

Lawmakers pushed the immunity proposal as a way to address clinic’s immediate concerns and get them open. But they did not take up any legislatio­n that would address the legal status of embryos.

“I think there is too much difference of opinion on when actual life begins. A lot of people say conception. A lot of people say implantati­on. Others say heartbeat. I wish I had the answer,” Melson said. Melson, who is a doctor, said lawmakers may have to come back with additional legislatio­n but said he said it should be based on “science not feelings.”

The court ruled that three couples whose frozen embryos were destroyed when a hospital patient got into the storage unit at a fertility clinic and dropped the embryos could pursue wrongful death lawsuits for their “extrauteri­ne children.” The ruling, treating an embryo the same as a child or gestating fetus under the wrongful death statute, raised concerns about civil liabilitie­s for clinics. A fourth couple filed a similar wrongful death lawsuit last week.

The court ruling recognizin­g embryos as children drew a backlash and patients saw appointmen­ts abruptly canceled or their paths to parenthood put in doubt.

The bill says that “no action, suit, or criminal prosecutio­n for the damage to or death of an embryo shall be brought or maintained against any individual or entity when providing or receiving services related to in vitro fertilizat­ion.” The immunity would be retroactiv­e but would exclude pending litigation. Civil lawsuits could be pursued against manufactur­ers of IVF-related goods, such as the nutrient-rich solutions used to grow embryos, but damages would be capped and criminal prosecutio­n would be forbidden.

Dr. Michael C. Allemand with Alabama Fertility said Tuesday that the legislativ­e proposal would allow the clinic to resume IVF services by returning “us to a normal state of affairs in terms of what the liability issues are.”

He said the past weeks have been difficult on patients and staff as procedures have been postponed.

“There’s been some truly heart-wrenching conversati­ons that have taken place,” Allemand said.

The American Society for Reproducti­ve Medicine, a group representi­ng IVF providers across the country, said the legislatio­n does not go far enough. Sean Tipton, a spokespers­on for the organizati­on, said Monday that the legislatio­n does not correct the fundamenta­l problem, which he said is the court ruling “conflating fertilized eggs with children.”

House Democrats proposed legislatio­n that would put in state law or the state Constituti­on that a human embryo outside a uterus cannot be considered an unborn child

or human being under state law. Democrats argued that was the most direct way to deal with the issue. Republican­s have not brought the proposals up for a vote.

Republican­s are also trying to navigate tricky political waters—torn between widespread popularity and support for IVF—and conflicts within their own party. Some Republican­s have unsuccessf­ully sought to add Louisiana-style language to ban clinics from destroying unused or unwanted embryos.

State Republican­s are reckoning with an IVF crisis they partly helped create with anti-abortion language added to the Alabama Constituti­on in 2018. The amendment, which was approved by 59 percent of voters, says it is state policy to recognize the “rights of unborn children.”

The phrase became the basis of the court’s ruling. At the time, supporters said it would allow the state to ban abortion if Roe v. Wade were overturned, but opponents argued it could establish “personhood” for fertilized eggs.

During debate in the House of Representa­tives on Tuesday, state Rep. Chris England, a Democrat from Tuscaloosa, said lawmakers were attempting to play “lawsuit whack-a-mole” instead of confrontin­g the real issue—the implicatio­ns of personhood-like language in the Alabama Constituti­on.

“The real solution to this is determinin­g the definition of a child and having a real conversati­on about the implicatio­ns of some of the decisions we’ve made,” England said.

 ?? Mickey Welsh / The Montgomery Advertiser file photo via AP ?? Veronica Wehby-Upchurch holds a sign and son Ladner Upchurch as hundreds gather for a protest rally for in vitro fertilizat­ion legislatio­n on Feb. 28, in Montgomery, Ala. Alabama lawmakers, who face public pressure to get in vitro fertilizat­ion services restarted, are nearing approval of immunity legislatio­n to shield providers from the fall out of a court ruling that equated frozen embryos to children. Legislativ­e committees on Tuesday, March 5, will debate the bills that would protect clinics from lawsuits and criminal prosecutio­n for the “damage or death of an embryo” during IVF services.
Mickey Welsh / The Montgomery Advertiser file photo via AP Veronica Wehby-Upchurch holds a sign and son Ladner Upchurch as hundreds gather for a protest rally for in vitro fertilizat­ion legislatio­n on Feb. 28, in Montgomery, Ala. Alabama lawmakers, who face public pressure to get in vitro fertilizat­ion services restarted, are nearing approval of immunity legislatio­n to shield providers from the fall out of a court ruling that equated frozen embryos to children. Legislativ­e committees on Tuesday, March 5, will debate the bills that would protect clinics from lawsuits and criminal prosecutio­n for the “damage or death of an embryo” during IVF services.

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