Should health insurers cover cost of fertility treatment?
Californians seeking to start a family with the help of in vitro fertilization are often on the hook for the full cost of treatment, in the range of tens of thousands of dollars. The cost could deter some people from having children, and it could leave others in exorbitant debt.
While 17 states have laws that require health insurers to cover fertility treatments, most of which include in vitro, California does not.
The debate over whether health insurance plans should provide fertility coverage isn't new to Sacramento, but even in a state where Democrats like to boast about their fight to advance reproductive health, these efforts have not gone very far. The main hold up is money.
Assemblymember Buffy Wicks, an Oakland Democrat, is trying again this
year. Her Assembly Bill 2029 would require some health insurance plans to cover fertility treatments, including in vitro fertilization. The bill also broadens the definition of infertility so more people would be eligible to be diagnosed and treated, including single persons, samesex couples, and transgender people.
Wicks recently accepted amendments in an attempt to reduce the cost of her bill, which as first drafted had a $715 million price tag for employers and health plan enrollees. The coverage mandate in her revised bill would apply only to large group health insurance, which covers about 9 million Californians. Plans in the small group and individual markets would be exempt. Even as first written, the bill would not apply to Medi-Cal, the insurance program for low-income residents.
The bill would also now cap a person's lifetime benefits to $75,000 and limit egg retrievals to three.
“This is my third time doing this,” Wicks said. “We're trying to get this passed and this means making amendments to narrow it.”
Wicks said the issue is personal to her — her second child is a product of in vitro fertilization. (In 2020, Wicks took her then newborn to the Capitol to vote for a family leave bill.) The goal, she said, is to take a piecemeal approach and expand the benefit to more people over time.
California law currently requires insurance companies to offer fertility treatment, excluding in vitro,
but it's up to the employer or group to decide whether that's included as a covered benefit. This bill would make that coverage mandatory.
Annabel Adams, who recently testified in support of Wicks' bill, has paid close to $50,000 for three rounds of in vitro fertilization. Born with a chromosomal inversion that makes it difficult for her to sustain a pregnancy, she has suffered six losses.
Her doctors recommended in vitro fertilization, or IVF, a process in which eggs are retrieved from the ovaries and fertilized by sperm in a lab. The fertilized egg, or embryo, is then transferred to the uterus. For Adams, this process allows her doctors to test the embryos to ensure they aren't affected by her genetic issue, increasing her chances of a sustainable pregnancy.
Her first round of treatment, including medication, cost her $25,600, she said. Her Kaiser insurance plan, as offered by her University of California employer, didn't cover it. Her husband's insurance helped cover some of the costs for the second and third rounds.
“Every pregnancy is filled with terror. These are wanted pregnancies; these are children we are envisioning and planning a future around,” said Adams, a resident of Long Beach and founder of California Fertility Advocates. “Finding out that IVF was essentially the cure to my disease and knowing it was not easily accessible to me, it felt like an added layer of harm.”
The health insurance lobby and business groups oppose Wicks' bill, citing the cost. They say that like other pieces of legislation that require new benefits to be covered, this bill would prompt increases in health insurance premiums for employers and employees.
According to the California Association of Health Plans, this is the most expensive bill the organization is opposing this year, and Wicks' recent amendments don't change its stance.
“As health plans we have to be concerned about the costs for everyone,” said Mary Ellen Grant, a spokesperson for the association. “We are not disputing the merits of this bill, but they do increase health care costs for Californians. That's just not something that the health plans can get behind.”
Grant said that lawmakers have to take into consideration the sum of all benefit mandates they choose to pass, not just a single bill. This year, the association is opposing 14 bills that would require new benefits be covered — collectively, these bills could increase annual premiums by $1.5 billion, the association said.
The California Chamber of Commerce and various local chambers, representing the interests of businesses, have also voiced their opposition to the bill because of the cost. The bill is next headed to the Assembly Appropriations Committee, which weighs a bill's fiscal impact.