White House backs away from IVF coverage mandate despite Trump’s campaign pledge, Washington Post reports
UNITED STATES, AUG 3 – The administration will not seek congressional action to mandate insurer coverage for IVF, redirecting funds to infertility education programs instead, despite campaign promises.
- On Sunday, The Washington Post reported that the White House has quietly abandoned plans to require private insurers to cover IVF, reversing a campaign pledge.
- Two sources said the administration does not intend to ask legislators to draft a bill making IVF coverage mandatory, since enacting such a mandate requires an act of Congress.
- Between $12,000 to $25,000 per cycle, Trump signed an executive order acknowledging IVF costs and that only a quarter of employers and states cover it shortly.
- The administration plans to redirect funds from a federal program helping low-income women access birth control and STI testing to an infertility training center promoting holistic approaches.
- In reaction, Democratic strategist Mike Nellis wrote: "Trump is backing out of his promise to make IVF free for every woman in America," and Ameshia Cross added: "Remember when Trump said he was the father of IVF...all of the women who voted for him in hopes of affordable or free IVF got played.
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ICYMI: Donald Trump Is Attacking Access to IVF and Backtracking on Campaign Promises to Make Fertility Treatment Free for Everyone
Over the weekend, Donald Trump signaled that he does not plan to require health insurers to provide coverage for in vitro fertilization (IVF) services, backtracking on his campaign promises to make IVF free. One in three Americans has used, or personally knows someone who has used, IVF to try and conceive. Americans across party lines say access to fertility planning like IVF should be easier to access.On the campaign trail, Trump promised the g…
Analysis: Trump’s cynical bait-and-switch on IVF
To hear President Donald Trump tell it, he wields an almost magical ability to lower Americans’ health care costs. Yet that doesn’t seem to extend to one area where he made explicit 2024 campaign promises: in vitro fertilization.
Despite campaign pledge, Trump IVF coverage plan has no clear path
A key promise from President Donald Trump's 2024 campaign to expand insurance coverage for in vitro fertilization is still on hold with no legislation in place, according to the Washington Post. In vitro fertilization, or IVF, is a medical procedure where an egg is fertilized by sperm outside the body, then implanted in the uterus to assist with pregnancy. It is often used by individuals or couples experiencing fertility challenges. Trump’s plan…
Bad News For Anyone Who Actually Thought Trump Was Gonna Get Them Free IVF
WikimediaLast year, when Donald Trump was running for President, he made a pretty strange pledge for a Republican. He promised that he was going to make in vitro fertilization free, either by having the government pay for it or by requiring insurance companies to cover it. It was an unusual choice, not just because Republicans sure don’t like government “handouts” or telling health insurance companies what they can’t do, but also because a rathe…
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