MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Alabama lawmakers facing public pressure to get in vitro fertilization services restarted in the state advanced legislation Tuesday to shield providers from the fallout of a court ruling that equated frozen embryos to children.
The court decision caused an immediate backlash as groups across the country raised concerns about a court ruling recognizing embryos as children. Patients in Alabama shared stories of having upcoming embryo transfers abruptly canceled and their paths to parenthood put in doubt.
Republicans in the GOP-dominated Alabama Legislature are looking to the immunity proposal as a solution to clinics’ concerns. But they have shied away from proposals that would address the legal status of embryos created in IVF labs.
“Let’s get IVF restarted ASAP,” Fertility Alabama, one of the providers that paused services, wrote in a social media post urging support for the bill.
However, The American Society for Reproductive Medicine, a group representing IVF providers across the country, said the legislation does not go far enough.
Sean Tipton, a spokesman for the organization, said Monday that the legislation does not correct the “fundamental problem,” which he said is the court ruling “conflating fertilized eggs with children.”
House Democrats proposed legislation last week stating that a human embryo outside a uterus can not be considered an unborn child or human being under state law. Democrats argued that was the most direct way to deal with the issue. Republicans have not brought the proposal up for a vote.
The GOP proposals state that “no action, suit, or criminal prosecution for the damage to or death of an embryo shall be brought for “providing or receiving services related to in vitro fertilization.” The legislation would apply retroactively except in cases where litigation is already underway.