Fertility
ARC Fertility to provide family-building benefits to American Medical Women’s Association
Over 40 per cent of US organisations now offer at least one fertility benefit
ARC Fertility will provide family-forming benefits to the American Medical Women’s Association (AMWA) to support employees.
The AMWA is an organisation dedicated to supporting women in medicine and improving women’s health.
It aims to advance women in medicine, advocate for equity, and ensure excellence in healthcare. Its membership includes physicians, residents, trainees and other healthcare professionals.
Every year, fertility leaders gather in New York City for the Night of Hope Gala to honour notable contributions to the field of infertility and family forming.
At this year’s gala, RESOLVE: The National Infertility Association honoured AMWA with the Hope for Advocacy Award.
ARC Fertility, a California-based network of fertility clinics, congratulated the association on this recognition and expressed its excitement to have been chosen as a partner to provide its staff with fertility benefits.
“AMWA and Dr Paula Amato more than deserve their RESOLVE honours,” sais G. David Adamson, founder and CEO of ARC Fertility.
“I am so proud that AMWA is walking the talk of women’s healthcare by selecting ARC Fertility to provide AMWA staff with family-forming benefits.”
Eliza Chin, executive director of AMWA, said: “We have been thankful for the support of RESOLVE and ARC Fertility in our work.
“Our goal is that access to programmes, resources, and benefits coverage be available to any physician and trainee who seeks it. And this year, AMWA is partnering with ARC Fertility to make sure we also put words into action and made fertility benefits coverage available to all AMWA full-time employees.
“We hope that other healthcare organisations will join us in this effort,” Chin added.
In 2021, the number of large companies offering or enhancing their family-building benefit grew by eight per cent year-over-year, according to FertilityIQ.
International Foundation research confirms that the prevalence of these benefits is on the rise with preliminary data from the 2022 Employee Benefits Survey showing that 40 per cent of US organisations offer at least one fertility benefit.
Jenny Saft, co-founder of the fertility benefits platform Apryl, says an increasing number of women choose to have kids later in their life.
“Now it’s more important than ever to start speaking openly about egg freezing or IVF.
“If employers can implement strategic benefits, to give people access [to fertility care] they can make a huge statement not just by encouraging a more inclusive approach but by helping employees to plan their families and thrive in their career.”
Fertility
France urges 29-year-olds to start families now
France is urging 29-year-olds to have children as part of a 16-point plan to boost fertility and raise birth rates.
Health officials say the aim is to prevent men and women facing fertility problems later in life and thinking “if only I had known”.
The strategy comes as the country, like many western nations including the UK, faces tumbling birth rates.
The trend is creating concerns about how governments can fund pensions and healthcare for ageing populations with fewer younger working people paying taxes.
But policies to raise fertility rates globally have produced limited results, and critics of the scheme suggest better housing and maternity provision could be more effective.
The government will send out “targeted, balanced, and scientifically sound information” to young people on issues including sexual health and contraception.
The material “will also reiterate that fertility is a shared responsibility between women and men,” the country’s health ministry said.
The plan includes efforts to increase the number of egg-freezing centres from 40 to 70. The process involves extracting and storing a woman’s eggs for potential future use.
The country’s health system already provides free egg-freezing for people aged 29 to 37, a service that costs about £5,000 per round in the UK.
The country’s fertility rate of 1.56 children per woman is below the 2.1 needed to maintain a stable population.
However, it is higher than rates in China, Japan and South Korea, and the UK, where the latest figures show it dropped to a record low of 1.41 in England and Wales by 2024.
Professor François Gemenne, who specialises in sustainability and migration at HEC Paris Business School, told Sky News: “This is something that demographers had known for a long time, but the fact that there were more deaths than births in France last year created a shock effect.”
He said the country’s “demographic worry” is exacerbated by the design of its pensions system and its “obsession with immigration and the fear of being ‘replaced'”.
The plan also includes a new national communication campaign, a “My Fertility” website advising on the effects of smoking, weight and lifestyle, and school lessons for children about reproductive health.
The health ministry has acknowledged its maternal and infant mortality rates are higher than neighbouring countries and is beginning a review of perinatal care to address the “concerning” situation.
Channa Jayasena, professor in reproductive endocrinology at Imperial College London, told Sky News: “On the female side, societal changes leading to older age of motherhood are certainly important.
He said obesity was also a problem as it increased women’s risk of polycystic ovary syndrome and endometriosis.
Allan Pacey, professor of andrology (male reproductive health) at Manchester University, said for most people globally, deciding to have children was “down to [non-medical] factors such as better access to education, career opportunities, taxation, housing, mortgages, finance, etc.”
“Medicine can’t help with those things,” Pacey added.
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Fertility
Parents sue IVF clinic after delivering someone else’s baby
A Florida couple have sued an IVF clinic after giving birth to a baby who is not genetically related to either of them.
Tiffany Score and Steven Mills hired IVF Life, which operates as the Fertility Center of Orlando in Longwood to help them conceive about five years ago using in vitro fertilisation.
The couple had an embryo implanted in April and welcomed a baby girl nine months later, but soon suspected the clinic had made an error.
Both Score and Mills are white, but the baby had the appearance of a racially non-Caucasian child, according to the lawsuit.
Genetic testing confirmed that the baby is not biologically theirs. The couple filed the lawsuit on 22 January after allegedly trying to contact the clinic multiple times without getting a response.
Jack Scarola, one of the couple’s lawyers, told the Orlando Sentinel: “They have fallen in love with this child. They would be thrilled in the knowledge that they could raise this child.
“But their concern is that this is someone else’s child, and someone could show up at any time and claim the baby and take that baby away from them.”
Score and Mills are also concerned that one of the three fertilised eggs they had frozen at the clinic may have been mistakenly implanted into someone else.
They have demanded that the clinic share what happened with all other patients who had embryos stored at the facility during the year before Score gave birth. They also want IVF Life to pay for genetic testing of every child born as a result of its services over the last five years, and to account for their remaining embryos.
The couple said in a statement: “We love our little girl. We would hope to be able to continue to raise her ourselves with confidence that she won’t be taken away from us.
“At the same time, we are aware that we have a moral obligation to find and notify her biological parents, as it is in her best interest that her genetic parents are provided the option to raise her as their own.”
A family spokesperson said: “Based upon leads discovered to date, and despite the lack of help or cooperation from the clinic, there is hope that we will be able to introduce our daughter to her genetic parents and to find our own genetic child soon.”
The lawsuit names IVF Life LLC and Dr Milton McNichol, who runs the clinic.
The Fertility Center of Orlando had posted a notice on its website stating it is “actively cooperating with an investigation to support one of our patients in determining the source of an error that resulted in the birth of a child who is not genetically related to them.”
The notice was removed after a court hearing on Wednesday.
During the hearing, the judge ordered the clinic to submit a thorough plan for handling the situation by Friday.
McNichol was reprimanded by Florida’s Board of Medicine in May 2024 after an inspection of the clinic in June 2023 revealed several issues, including equipment that did not meet current performance standards, failure to comply with a risk-management plan and missing medication.
He was fined US$5,000.
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