Alabama’s IVF ruling is the latest challenge for women’s health-tech startups in the post-‘Roe’ era

The recent Alabama Supreme Court ruling that frozen embryos should be considered “extrauterine children” and, therefore, human beings had an immediate chilling effect on IVF facilities in the state, where at least three in vitro fertilization providers to date have already halted services in the decision’s wake. It’s also the latest challenge for women’s and family health-focused tech startups in a femtech space grappling with restrictive new state laws that take aim at abortion, contraception, and family planning services following the U.S. Supreme Court’s gutting of Roe v. Wade in 2022.

The controversial legal and questionable science behind the Alabama court decision—and the reality that Americans have relied on IVF for 8 million babies born in the U.S.—has galvanized backlash from the medical and scientific communities, as well as condemnation from politicians across the political spectrum. About one in ten American women report using fertility services, according to a 2023 survey by the Pew Research Center, with 2% of respondents saying they use IVF, typically after less-invasive and cheaper fertility treatments have failed them and their partners.

Kate Ryder, CEO of Maven, which provides digital platforms to guide users to fertility and family planning resources (among other women’s health services such as cervical screenings), slammed the Alabama ruling in a LinkedIn post. “If you’re a fertility patient, you’re likely singularly focused on building your family. It is on your mind every day, and you’re willing to do whatever it takes—depleting your savings, injecting yourself multiple times a day—in hopes that it will lead to a baby. But if you are a patient in Alabama, as of last Friday, your journey has just become wrenching,” Ryder wrote.

“IVF is about making as many healthy embryos as possible to get to a successful pregnancy. But now your embryos, whether genetically viable or not, cannot be destroyed because they are considered ‘children.’ Alabama is the first state, and the first place in the world, to make this legal ruling—which goes against every major fertility medical organization and even the Medical Association of the State of Alabama,” she continued.

Ryder isn’t alone in her outrage. Other femtech startups, including those specializing in services like egg freezing and IVF, were equally blunt. New York-based Kindbody, for instance, posted a featured statement on its site slamming the decision.

“For many of our patients, embryos represent the hope of realizing their dream of starting or expanding their families. The Alabama Supreme Court ruling undermines this hope by subjecting embryos to legal scrutiny and forcing patients to live with the devastating prospect of not having the ability to make decisions about their reproductive futures,” wrote Angie Beltsos, Kindbody chief executive physician and CEO of clinical operations, in a scathing post. “It will restrict access to and drive up costs of essential care that is needed by many, and is already inaccessible to most. The Supreme Court decision directly contradicts the scientific advancements that provide today the best chance of success and moreover will restrict access to care for people in need.”

Tech startups connecting women to reproductive and family planning services are grappling with a shifting political environment, especially in socially conservative states such as Alabama, in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to roll back Roe v. Wade and its effects on access to reproductive health services like abortion. Investor funding in the space has also stalled, according to PitchBook. Alabama’s IVF ruling is yet another challenge these young companies, and the patients who rely on them, must tackle.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91038362/alabamas-ivf-ruling-latest-challenge-womens-health-tech-startups-post-roe-era?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Établi 1y | 27 févr. 2024, 11:10:07


Connectez-vous pour ajouter un commentaire

Autres messages de ce groupe

Time anxiety is ruining your life. It doesn’t have to

Chris Guillebeau spent years racing against time, visiting all 193 countries before he turned 35, hosting annual gatherings of thousands, and writing bestsellers like The $100 Startup. Bu

24 juil. 2025, 13:40:04 | Fast company - tech
This free site is like Google Maps for local food discovery

As my family settles into a whole new city and community, I’ve been eagerly exploring a variety of sites and services for discovering new gems and getting to know our area. And while our recent cr

24 juil. 2025, 11:20:08 | Fast company - tech
He helped kids be creative. Now, he wants to do the same for CEOs

More than a decade ago, Pramod Sharma set out to make learning more engaging. Through

24 juil. 2025, 11:20:07 | Fast company - tech
This tool lets users send fake legal letters that look real—without a lawyer

If you can’t afford a lawyer, it turns out there’s nothing stopping you from sending a scary-looking letter that, at first glance, seems to come from one—and hoping the recipient doesn’t read the

24 juil. 2025, 09:10:03 | Fast company - tech
9 essential Perplexity AI search tips and tricks

All right, settle in, folks, because today we’re going to try to out-Google Google with the next generation of search: Perplexity.

So, what exactly is

24 juil. 2025, 06:40:07 | Fast company - tech
Tokenization is gaining ground in the crypto world. Here’s what to know

Tokenization has long been a buzzword for crypto enthusiasts, who have been arguing for years that blo

23 juil. 2025, 21:30:05 | Fast company - tech
‘Door kick challenge’ goes viral—but cops say the TikTok trend could lead to serious injury

Ding dong ditching has resurfaced as the “door kick challenge.” But this time it could lead to criminal charges and potentially deadly consequences. 

In Florida this week, five mino

23 juil. 2025, 21:30:04 | Fast company - tech