
What "fertilization president" Trump can learn from state efforts to expand IVF access
CBSN
For nearly three agonizing years, Mariah Freschi and her husband have been trying to have a second baby. The California mother recently underwent surgery to remove her blocked fallopian tubes, leaving in vitro fertilization as her only option to get pregnant. But the cost quoted by her Sacramento-area clinic was $25,000 — out of reach for Freschi, a preschool teacher, and her husband, a warehouse worker.
"When we first found out IVF was our only option, it just felt so overwhelming," said Freschi, who has insurance through the California marketplace. "No one sets aside 20, 30 grand to grow your family."
The Freschis are far from alone in requiring medical assistance to have children: About 13% of women and 11% of men in the U.S. experience infertility, while others are in a same-sex relationship, single, or want to preserve their eggs or sperm before undergoing various medical treatments.