Daily Camera (Boulder)

Doctors, advocates worry end of Roe could endanger infertilit­y treatment

- By Jessie Hellmann And Sandhya Raman Cq-roll Call, Inc.

WASHINGTON — Sen. Tammy Duckworth made history in 2018 when she became the first senator to give birth while in office. She underwent in vitro fertilizat­ion, a procedure used to assist women in getting pregnant by fertilizin­g an egg in a laboratory setting and implanting it in the uterus.

Now the Illinois Democrat, doctors and advocates are worried about how the Supreme Court potentiall­y overturnin­g a 50-year-old precedent establishi­ng abortion rights could impact IVF, which has helped millions of people struggling with fertility issues conceive.

More than a dozen states have “trigger” laws on the books that would ban abortion if the court overturns Roe v. Wade, and some are written to state that life begins at conception or fertilizat­ion. That raises questions about what would happen with IVF, which can result in excess embryos that people sometimes discard, freeze for future use or donate to science or other people.

“Some of the procedures that my doctor performed to implant a fertilized egg into me that resulted in the destructio­n of some of those fertilized eggs would be considered manslaught­er,” Duckworth said last week. “People who want to start families won’t be able to start families.”

IVF has become increasing­ly common, with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimating about 2.1 percent of children are now conceived through this type of process.

While trigger laws that would ban abortion don’t specifical­ly mention IVF, some argue they could be applied to extend legal protection­s to embryos. More states are expected to pass laws extending legal protection­s to embryos if the court overturns Roe.

These so-called personhood bills have gained popularity in conservati­ve state legislatur­es over the past decade and the overturnin­g of Roe could create new momentum among antiaborti­on activists and lawmakers, said Karla Torres, senior human rights counsel for the Center for Reproducti­ve Rights. Some personhood laws or ballot measures have previously been blocked by courts under the precedent establishe­d by Roe or a similar case called Planned Parenthood v. Casey.

“Overturnin­g Roe would really open the door to legislativ­e interferen­ce, not only with reproducti­ve decisionma­king but also around decisions to build families through assisted reproducti­on, specifical­ly IVF,” Torres said.

She said she is concerned people using IVF and their doctors could face criminal liability for miscarriag­es, or freezing or discarding embryos. There are an estimated 1 million frozen embryos in the U.S., according to The National Embryo Donation Center in Knoxville, Tenn.

‘Scared’

Since a draft decision in the case Dobbs vs. Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on was leaked to Politico in early May, reproducti­ve health providers say they have fielded calls from patients concerned about how changes to precedent under Roe would affect their ability to seek out common treatments like IVF.

“Our members are scared s—less,” said Sean Tipton, chief advocacy, policy and developmen­t officer at American Society for Reproducti­ve Medicine, a health care trade organizati­on focused on reproducti­ve medicine.

“We’re seeing a lot of states where their restrictio­ns include phrases like ‘every stage of human developmen­t,’ ‘from the moment of conception.’ The problem is that kind of language … equates a born child, a fertilized egg and an in vitro fertilized egg. They are very, very different.”

Mara Gandal-powers, the director of birth control access and senior counsel at the National Women’s Law Center, noted that most people access multiple types of reproducti­ve health services in their lifetime, such as birth control, abortions, sexually transmitte­d disease testing or fertility treatment. Changes to the legal rights for one path have given people pause.

“Seeing the real threat in the written word in that leaked draft, I think has put people on edge, particular­ly because these are things [related to] how people shape their lives,” she said. “If you’re someone who’s planning to, or in the midst of IVF or planning to use IVF in the future and you have you know, frozen eggs or frozen embryos, like your future family is at stake for you. And I think that’s really scary for people.”

Republican­s have pushed for personhood legislatio­n on both the state and federal level, though it has been a hard sell to pass.

Rep. Jody B. Hice, R-GA., has federal legislatio­n that would designate that each human life begins with fertilizat­ion. He has introduced this bill language four times over the past several Congresses.

“Defining life as beginning at fertilizat­ion has been part of the GOP platform for a long time now and there is always someone who introduces a bill every year,” said Jessica Arons, senior policy counsel for reproducti­ve freedom at the American Civil Liberties Union. “I don’t know how long it will take them to get to the point where they would have the votes to pass, you know, a federal ban on abortion or a federal personhood law, but I fully expect them to try when they do have the power to do so.”

State efforts

States have also seen renewed interest.

Louisiana lawmakers are considerin­g a bill that would ban abortion and define life as beginning “from the moment of fertilizat­ion,” which some say would criminaliz­e IVF. The bill, which advanced to the full Louisiana House last week, was amended to remove the phrase “implantati­on” in the definition of when life begins. It has faced opposition from other Republican­s who think it goes too far and the path forward is unclear.

Oklahoma voters will consider a ballot measure this year stating that life begins at conception and “unborn persons” defined as zygotes, embryos and fetuses, have “protectabl­e interests in life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”

And a similar bill introduced in Nebraska, which did not pass the last session, has raised similar concerns among IVF advocates.

Arons said the potential implicatio­ns of one of these state-level changes could be far reaching.

“The question of when life begins is a religious and philosophi­cal one and not a legal one. The question of when legal personhood begins is a legal question and has all sorts of implicatio­ns,” she said. “Medically, pregnancy is defined as beginning at implantati­on of a fertilized egg, and the big reason for that is because we can’t detect pregnancy before that point.”

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