"Where the conversation between women goes next..."

‘This week, the Government tried to double the price of IVF. And no one knew.’

 

This week, the Turnbull Government introduced a Bill. But as Kate Ellis MP writes, the effect of the Bill will more than double the cost of IVF treatment…

There are times in Parliament where you are sharply reminded of the most important role of a politician – representing the public.

Giving a voice to Australian families – the men, women and children who are at the end of the decisions that politicians collectively make every day. For me, Wednesday was one of these moments.

From the leftover pieces of last year’s disastrous Budget, this week the Turnbull Government introduced the Health Insurance Amendment (Safety Net) Bill 2015. The title might sound harmless, but as always, the devil is in the detail.

The Government’s proposed changes to the Medicare safety net come with some nasty catches, and one of the nastiest consequences falls where you might least expect – the thousands of Australians who will need to access reproductive technology to give them a child.

Watch Kate Ellis speak about IVF in parliament below. Post continues after video.

For families undergoing IVF treatment, the financial, personal and physical strain can be significant.

I have seen people close to me struggle with infertility and the immense emotion which comes with the realisation that having a baby simply won’t be the easy journey they hoped.

For many, this news comes with emotions not unlike those of grieving a significant loss. A loss of identity. A loss of control. A loss of the ability to conceive.

Relationships can be strained, and many people are left with an overwhelming sense of isolation and pressure as they navigate the endless IVF information, experts, doctors, decisions.

And all this before the financial considerations.

 

According to the Fertility Society of Australia, one in six couples in Australia and New Zealand suffer infertility. IVF private patients currently face out-of-pocket costs of $4,000 per cycle, and success rates vary dramatically, with many couples needing multiple cycles of IVF. At the same time, there will be many individuals for which IVF will not be successful. These families face the confronting conclusion that they may never conceive, but they are still left with the same bills to pay.

The Fertility Society of Australia found that the changes the Turnbull Government is seeking could see IVF costs rise to $10,000 to $15,000 per cycle, which would put an inordinate financial strain on many parents desperate to have children, while IVF clinics have warned some women could be forced to give up their chance of having a child, or opt for riskier multiple embryo implants.

Australians desperate to have a child shouldn’t be made to suffer by a Government which only sees health as a source of Budget cuts. Australians at their most vulnerable, raw and emotional, deserve better.

I was proud to stand up in Parliament and send a message to Malcolm Turnbull and the entire Government – find your savings elsewhere.

Here are the comments
  • John Lindsay Mayger

    This will affect the socially infertile like single women and lesbians as well as the many medically infertile couples and singles. This increase in price will drive many women to seek free sperm on the many internet sperm donor sites like Facebook group “Sperm Donation Australia” and the international pay sites like “Co-parentmatch.com”. As an economist and an AI sperm donor I see “the guiding hand of the market” merging here to supply free unregulated sperm to the next attacked marginalised group in Australia.

    • Maid Bed

      Do you think fathers are an optional extra in a child’s life?