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How the Supreme Court's decision on Roe v. Wade affects the fertility industry

(CNN)Friday's Supreme Court decisionfears that Roe v. Wadecould be overturned Caused. Extensive impact on those who are thinking of becoming pregnant and the clinics that provide services to help them. "

Experts told CNNearlier onthat the High Court ruling was a state legal territory that interfered with the birth process known as in vitro fertilization, where sperm fertilize eggs outside. Said that it could open. body.

Fertility doctors and scholars studying the legal context surrounding fertility treatment have said there is significant uncertainty in CNNs. Freed from the precedent that has effectively protected the fertility process from government intervention.

It is feared that the lack of clarity will affect the treatments doctors are willing to offer to IVF patients and the decisions people must make on how to pursue family growth. I am.

"Overturning the Roe v. Wade case will have a vast and widespread impact on the fertility industry. Opinions include" fetal humans, "" potential life, "and" fetuses. " Includes numerous references to "life". "Many of the languages, and the logic behind them, apply to the embryo," he said.

"Fertility clinics are flooded with allegations of illegal death if they discard embryos without permission," Wolff added.

According to data released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about two out of 100 children born in the United States are pregnant with IVF. When an individual or couple goes through the IVF process, the work begins in the laboratory. There, the sperm fertilize the egg after a few weeks of preparation. The goal is ultimately to transplant a healthy embryo into the human uterus. But first, the embryo needs to grow to the blastocyst stage. This usually occurs 5-7 days after fertilization.

IVF clinics typically use two genetic materials to create multiple embryos. This is because you do not know which will grow to the right stage and which will succeed in pregnancy.

Dr. Marcel Cedars, President of the American Society for Reproductive Medicinewarned in May. The treatments our infertility patients rely on to build their families.

Wolf is concerned that clinic and freezer manufacturers could be held criminally liable if they dispose of embryos or if the freezer holding the embryos breaks down. He said he was doing it.

"If a fertility clinic accidentally discards an embryo, this happens very often, but it is potentially life-threatening," he said. "Can fertility clinics and their embryologists face murder or manslaughter due to their illegal activity? When the embryo-holding freezer manufacturer goes bankrupt, the freezer company is potentially.

California University San Francisco-Dr. Carolina Sueld, a fertility specialist certified in both obstetrics and gynecology at Fresno, told CNN on Friday. "There are also concerns that the personality bill will follow," he said. The belief that life begins with fertilization.

"This will have a dramatic impact on the way infertility treatments are provided to patients in these states. These treatments are not only infertility, but also genetic diseases (and) relapsed. It also applies to miscarriage, "says Sueldo.