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Group wants IVF covered by health insurance

A group which lobbies for patients who use IVF treatment are to meet with private health insurers in the coming weeks to discuss the possibility of offering cover to policyholders seeking such treatments.

Helen Browne, co-founder of the National Infertility Support and Information Group confirmed the meeting at the group’s national conference in Limerick at the weekend, the Irish Times reports.

Ms Browne, who was one of the members of the Commission on Assisted Human Reproduction, appointed by then Health Minister Michéal Martin in 2000, believes health insurers should cover fertility treatments.  

IVF treatment is highly expensive. One cycle of IVF (in vitro fertilisation) can cost about €5,000.

While a tax rebate can be claimed on some of the outlay, the financial burden on those seeking treatments is still significant.

While at least one health insurer provides limited cover, not all insurers do.

“Should private health insurers cover it? Of course they should. They’ve been in touch with us, so were hoping to meet with them and to see [what can be done],” Ms Browne said.

“It’s just an initial meeting, they just want to know what we are about, what we are doing, our membership, and just to get a feel to see what we are about. I would be too afraid to prejudge it. We are looking forward to it.”

She said people with medical cards should also be covered.

“There’s an awful lot of people – who are in the middle – who don’t have private health insurance and who aren’t entitled to medical cards.

“They are the people I would have a lot of concerns about, because a lot of people have cancelled their private health insurance because of the present climate,” she said.

Ms Browne also repeated previous calls on the Government to urgently regulate fertility clinics.

“Successive health ministers haven’t touched it. Every minister, when they’ve been approached, have said, ‘Yes, we will be looking into it’.

“I feel saddened that they are not looking at a certain population of citizens who need fertility treatment,” she said.

“The Government aren’t looking into the care and needs of these people. That’s what saddens me, that people are just left to their own devices.”

The Commission on Assisted Human Reproduction, of which Ms Browne was a member, published a report eight years ago.

Among its recommendations were that destructive experimentation should be allowed on human embryos, that surrogacy should be legally permitted and that same-sex couples should be allowed to use egg and sperm donations to conceive children artificially.