Miami Herald

Alabama hospital pauses IVF after court ruling deems frozen embryos are children

- BY KIM CHANDLER Associated Press

MONTGOMERY, ALA.

A large Alabama hospital has paused in vitro fertilizat­ion treatments as health care providers weigh the impact of a state court ruling that frozen embryos are the legal equivalent of children.

The University of Alabama at Birmingham said in a statement Wednesday that its UAB Division of Reproducti­ve Endocrinol­ogy and Infertilit­y has paused the treatments “as it evaluates the Alabama Supreme Court’s decision that a cryopreser­ved embryo is a human being.”

“We are saddened that this will impact our patients’ attempt to have a baby through IVF, but we must evaluate the potential that our patients and our physicians could be prosecuted criminally or face punitive damages for following the standard of care for IVF treatments,” the statement emailed by spokeswoma­n Savannah Koplon read.

Other fertility treatment providers in the state were continuing to provide IVF as lawyers explored the impact of the ruling.

The ruling by the Republican Alabama Supreme Court prompted a wave of concern about the future of IVF treatments in the state and the potential unintended consequenc­es of anti-abortion laws in Republican-controlled states. Patients called clinics to see if scheduled IVF treatments would continue. And providers consulted with attorneys.

Justices — citing language in the Alabama Constituti­on that the state recognizes the “rights of the unborn child” — said three couples could sue for wrongful death when their frozen embryos were destroyed in a accident at a storage facility.

“Unborn children are ‘children’ … without exception based on developmen­tal stage, physical location, or any other ancillary characteri­stics,” Justice Jay Mitchell wrote in Friday’s majority ruling by the all-Republican court.

Mitchell said the court had previously ruled that a fetus killed when a woman is pregnant is covered under Alabama’s Wrongful Death of a Minor Act and nothing excludes “extrauteri­ne children from the Act’s coverage.”

The ruling brought a rush of warnings about the potential impact on fertility treatments and the freezing of embryos, which had previously been considered property by the courts. Groups representi­ng both IVF treatment providers and patients seeking fertility treatments raised alarm about the decision.

The Alabama Supreme Court decision partly hinged on anti-abortion language added to the Alabama Constituti­on in 2018, stating it is the “policy of this state to ensure the protection of the rights of the unborn child.”

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