SCS graduate research student Molly Johnston |
Australia is experiencing the growing
global trend of women freezing their eggs for fertility preservation providing
the option for thawing and IVF treatment in future to have children.
However, a major medical conference in
Adelaide today heard there was no consistent cross border regulation about who
should be able to access egg freezing with a call to review policies that
encompass “changing societal opinions and community needs.”
Speaking at the annual scientific
meeting of the Fertility Society of Australia, Monash University researcher
Molly Johnston said: “While across border differences in health care are to be
expected, they raise questions about whether the principles that underpin
various policies on egg freezing are ethically justified and transparent.
“The variety of egg freezing policies seen
worldwide suggest they lack evidence, are outdated and require serious
review. The distinction between medical
and non-medical infertility underpins Australian policies, and it is open to
challenge.”
Ms Johnston said another driving factor
for a review was the advent of commercial or employer funding of elective egg
freezing to keep young women in the workforce while delaying motherhood.
Australian women seeking elective or
social egg freezing to preserve their fertility face a costly disadvantage
compared to those seeking the treatment for medical reasons, including the
prospect of being left infertile from cancer treatments or conditions such as
severe endometriosis.
Women choosing elective egg freezing
must pay for the treatment at around $10,000 per cycle, while those seeking it
for medical reasons are eligible for Medicare rebates of around $5,000 per
cycle.
“All women in Australia can seek egg
freezing treatment regardless of their reasons,” Ms Johnston said. “However, in the absence of common
regulation, individual clinics govern access to the treatment and can impose
their own restrictions such as an age limit.
“What is contentious is whether reasons
for seeking fertility preservation should matter.
“In medical or elective circumstances,
women are seeking to prevent infertility and they are not infertile at the time
they seek egg freezing.
“Similarly, it can be argued that there
is no difference between medical and non-medical egg freezing as in both cases
women are freezing their eggs with the same motive – the hope of securing their reproductive
future and protecting the chance of having their own biological offspring.”
Ms Johnston said company sponsored egg
freezing began in the United States about three years ago with major companies
including Microsoft, Google, Facebook and Apple now offering to cover the costs
of egg freezing for their female employees as part of their medical benefits
package.
“This trend is now emerging in
Australia, but I am not aware of any employees who have yet taken up this
option,” she said.
“While some hail company sponsored egg
freezing as promoting a woman’s reproductive rights and choices, other argue
that it is disempowering to women as they may feel pressured to take up the option
or risk not being competitive in the workforce.”
National and world leaders in assisted
reproductive technology are attending the Fertility Society meeting at the
Adelaide Convention Centre providing compelling insights into new ways of
assisting couples struggling to conceive naturally.
Story courtesy of Trevor Gill, Fertility Society of Australia.
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