Fertility health coverage is still hard to come by in many states
As fertility rates drop and more women postpone childbirth into their 30s and 40s, more states are considering mandating that private insurers cover fertility treatments to help people start a family without the crushing out-of-pocket expenses.
Such laws would help people such as Miraya and
"I had a lot of resentment and a lot of anger on top of the financial sacrifice. I just thought it was wrong. I don't want other parents to go through this," Gran said.
Twenty-one states require such coverage, but a proposed mandate failed to pass the
Some states are expanding mandates to cover more residents, including single people or same-sex couples. They're also expanding mandates to include coverage of fertility preservation procedures for cancer patients or others who would like to preserve sperm or eggs before undergoing treatments that could make them infertile.
Mayor
Decades of history
Fertility coverage mandates have a long history, beginning with the first one passed in
"The cost of IVF remains the greatest barrier to infertility care in the US," concluded a
Limited mandates like those in
The proposed expansion of the
Religious objections
"Our insurance company was billed
Last year, 61% of large employers had health plans that covered fertility treatment, and 47% covered IVF, according to an annual survey by
Even
But in
One insurer in
The insurer,
An insurer in
The Sanford Health Plan, which provides coverage throughout the upper Midwest, also argued there would be higher costs, citing a state study that showed a plan with a
The bills in
In
"I'll keep trying," Brandenburg said. "We're making headway. I can see more younger people coming in (to the legislature), and it's gaining votes all the time. If we can assist people who want to have families, why not?"
Like the Grans in
"I wish I had greater access to affordable medical care for infertility through my insurance benefits so that my husband and I could also have the chance to have even a single child, who could be born into a stable household to two parents who fought and worked very hard to bring them into the world," Carter wrote.
In
"Infertility is a common disease and should be covered by insurance like any other health need," Roys said.
A
Postponing childbirth
Some bill sponsors have pointed out that residents may postpone childbirth because of the high cost of housing and child care, as well as the reality of younger women increasingly working to establish careers before parenthood. But it's unlikely such laws will have an effect on fertility rates that have been below the replacement rate of two children per woman since 2010.
One study from the
"It's about states being receptive to messaging and advocacy from infertility treatment advocates, including many from the LBGTQ+ community," Gemmill said. Even with more insurance, however, birth rates overall are likely to keep falling, she said.
"The increasing use of fertility treatment won't have a large impact on



Fertility health coverage is still hard to come by in many states
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