Beijing to cover IVF, other fertility treatments for couples from July
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[June 15, 2023]
By Farah Master
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Beijing's government on Thursday announced that it
would cover 16 types of assisted reproduction technology under the
city's health care system from July 1, the latest move by authorities to
boost China's flagging birth rate.
In-vitro fertilisation, embryo transplantation, freezing and storing
semen are some of the treatments that would be included under basic
insurance, said Du Xin, deputy director of Beijing's Municipal Medical
Insurance Bureau.
The measure comes as China grapples to stem a decline in births after
posting its first population drop in six decades. The number of newborns
dropped to a record low of 6.77 per 1,000 people last year and is
expected to decline further in 2023.
China's National Health Commission last August issued guidance to
provinces on reforming policies to support fertility rates.
Liaoning, a province in China's northeast, said in May that it would
include assisted reproduction technologies from July 1.
Beijing's announcement also comes ahead of a court verdict for Teresa Xu,
an unmarried 35-year old Chinese woman who sued a Beijing public
hospital for violating her rights by refusing to freeze her eggs because
she is unmarried.
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Staff members walk past the waiting area
of the assisted reproductive centre at the Beijing Perfect Family
Hospital, which specialises in fertility treatments, in Beijing,
China April 6, 2023. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File Photo
Concerned about China's rapid
ageing, government political advisers proposed in March that single
and unmarried women should have access to egg freezing and in vitro
fertilisation (IVF) treatment, among other services.
It is difficult for unmarried women across the country to access
fertility treatments such as IVF and egg freezing technologies due
to a national rule that they must be married.
Some private clinics in provinces such as in the southwestern
Sichuan province have already begun permitting IVF due to falling
births.
Liberalising fertility treatments nationwide could unleash more
demand in what is already the world's biggest market, and strain
limited fertility services, said investors and industry executives.
(Additional reporting by the Beijing newsroom; Editing by Michael
Perry)
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