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In France and US, two wildly different takes on IVF

Ariel Cohen, CQ-Roll Call on

Published in News & Features

MONTPELLIER, FRANCE — In vitro fertilization, a procedure first used more than 45 years ago, has suddenly become the topic of political debate on both sides of the Atlantic — but for wildly different reasons.

In France, President Emmanuel Macron’s government is eyeing policies to promote the use of assisted reproductive technology, including IVF, to increase the nation’s declining birth rate. But French feminist groups say the proposal unduly inserts the government into private lives of women. They also worry that nationalist sentiment is driving the effort to boost birth rates.

The political fault lines look quite different in the U.S. where conservatives are the primary obstacle to IVF access. Despite former President Donald Trump’s endorsement of IVF this month, the fertility treatment has left many ultraconservative and evangelical conservatives conflicted, particularly when it comes to the disposal of unused embryos.

Legislatures in at least 13 states have introduced so-called personhood legislation that would classify an embryo as a human life. And in February, the Alabama Supreme Court ruled that frozen embryos created for the purpose of IVF can be considered children — a decision that caused some IVF clinics to close their doors.

By comparison, fertility experts in France are drafting a national fertility plan at Macron’s request to combat the country’s declining fertility rate. Those drafting the plan are recommending increased government investment in IVF as well as other fertility treatments.

Birth rates in France have been steadily declining in recent years, and decreased roughly 7 percent between 2022 and 2023. This isn’t as sharp a decline as in some other European countries, but in a January speech, Macron declared that France needs a “demographic rearmament.”

 

In France, IVF is paid for by the French national health plan, and each woman is entitled to four cycles of IVF per child. About 4 percent of French births are a result of IVF, and in the process the country discards roughly 150,0000 embryos per year.

In 2021, slightly more than 2 percent of U.S. births were a result of IVF. But Democrats and advocates now worry access to the procedure may become more challenging, as some fertility clinics are shutting their doors out of fear that they could be criminalized for discarding embryos.

Despite public comments from many Republicans in support of the procedure, it’s clear some hesitation remains: Last month, when Senate Democrats brought up a vote to protect IVF, Republicans shot it down.

“It’s crazy, it’s absolutely crazy,” Samir Hamamah, a Montpellier, France-based infertility doctor charged with writing Macron’s fertility plan, said of the IVF landscape in the U.S. “It’s strange and stupid to consider an embryo with five, six cells a human.”

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©2024 CQ-Roll Call, Inc. Visit at rollcall.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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