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The law is intended to restart IVF treatments by shielding patients and providers from civil and criminal charges, but does not change the state Supreme Court's ruling that embryos are children.
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U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz calls for Congress to create protections for fertility treatments over fears that an Alabama court decision could bring "chaos" and "uncertainty" across the country.
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For low-income people who are on Medicaid or whose employer health plan is skimpy, help for infertility seems unattainable.
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Why are so many frozen embryos created? And how is the Alabama Supreme Court ruling likely to affect IVF in the future? Here's what you need to know.
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More than half of the largest employers in the U.S. cover fertility care, which includes IVF. Researchers say a divide is growing between people who receive help paying for care and those left out.
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The disease, which predominantly affects patients of color, can damage the body in ways that can make it difficult to have a child. But patients don't always have access to fertility care.
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The twin birthrate nearly doubled between 1980 and 2014. Now it's going down among white mothers. What's behind the change?