Health

How an Alabama Court Ruling on Frozen Embryos May Restrict IVF

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A recent Alabama Supreme Court ruling that considers frozen embryos to be children under state law has doctors and legal experts raising concerns about the implications for fertility treatment.

The decision involves wrongful death claims brought by several couples whose frozen embryos were accidentally destroyed at a fertility clinic. In the ruling, justices said that a state law dating back to the 1800s permitting parents to sue over a child’s death “applies to all unborn children,” and that “unborn children are ‘children’ under the (law) without exception based on developmental stage, physical location, or any other ancillary characteristics.”

Defining embryos as children under the law has the potential to restrict access to in vitro fertilization (IVF), which involves combining eggs with sperm in a lab to develop an embryo that can be implanted into a woman’s uterus. Multiple embryos may be created, and sometimes the ones that aren’t implanted right away are frozen for future use because IVF can take multiple cycles to result in a successful pregnancy.

Equating an embryo to a child is scientifically unfounded, says Jennifer Kawwass, MD, the medical director of the Emory Reproductive Center in Atlanta. “The clinical ramifications of such a legal decision are tremendous and will undoubtedly have unintended consequences, including limiting the capacity of physicians to care for patients with infertility, some of whom are reliant on IVF to be able to build their families.”

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