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Alabama鈥檚 IVF ruling is having ripple effects. What it does 鈥 and doesn鈥檛 鈥 do.

Alabama is the latest state to throw reproductive rights, including the practice of in vitro fertilization, into a vortex of legislative whiplash and partisan drumbeating.

By Ali Martin, Staff writer

A national conversation about the full spectrum of issues around听defining when 鈥渓ife鈥 begins is underway at kitchen tables and workplaces alike, forged by weeks of legislative听and judicial upheaval in Alabama and beyond.

It began last month when Alabama鈥檚 state Supreme Court declared human embryos located outside a woman鈥檚 body to be children 鈥 a reference to those created through in vitro fertilization, or IVF. Some clinics halted IVF treatments completely, fearing prosecution. Health care providers and fertility patients voiced frustration and panic.听

State legislators responded three weeks later with a quickly passed law to safeguard IVF providers. Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey signed it right away, 鈥渟o that couples in Alabama hoping and praying to be parents can grow their families through IVF.鈥澨

The national attention hasn鈥檛 faded: Kamala Harris visited an abortion clinic last week 鈥撎齮he first vice president to do so; religious conservatives are asking House Republicans to clarify their views on when life begins; and Democrats in Alabama are pushing state legislation to protect contraception.听

Despite efforts to calm heightened, and often partisan, rhetoric, confusion over the future of IVF lingers. The new Alabama law gives legal immunity to IVF providers for the destruction of embryos听without addressing the core issue of what is referred to as 鈥渇etal personhood.鈥 Experts question whether the new law will hold up under the court ruling. They also point to broader social and ethical implications.听

鈥淭here are as many understandings of the status of when life begins, or what is a human life, as there are people,鈥 says Joanne Rosen, an expert on law and reproductive policy at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. 鈥淭he Alabama case decides as if this were definitive and as if there were only a singular view.鈥

What was important about the state Supreme Court ruling?

The Alabama Supreme Court ruling took the personhood concept to a new level. For the first time, a state court assigned rights to an embryo outside the womb. Other states recognize unborn children as people, but those have been limited to fetuses in utero, or inside a woman鈥檚 body.听

鈥淲e are in uncharted territory here, in Alabama and nationwide as we look at the implications of this ruling,鈥 says Naomi Cahn, co-director of the Family Law Center at the University of Virginia School of Law.听

Anti-abortion activists have long sought fetal personhood laws, and have succeeded in a number of states since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022. The Alabama court case shows the practical effects of extending 鈥減ersonhood鈥 beyond in utero embryos.At the same time, the new law has not resolved uncertainty in the fertility industry 鈥 and it has ratcheted up debate.听

Anti-abortion groups are split on IVF. Some believe embryos 鈥撎齟ven if frozen, in a test tube, and nonviable unless implanted 鈥撎齭hould be protected as human. Others see IVF as aiding the creation of life, and accept the loss of embryos as part of the process.听听

A coalition of anti-abortion groups, including CatholicVote and the Southern Baptist Convention, responded to the Alabama immunity bill with a letter of protest. Laws should consider the millions of embryos that could be 鈥渄iscarded or frozen indefinitely, violating the inherent dignity they possess by virtue of being human,鈥 writes the coalition.听

Medical science sees it differently: Pregnancy is defined as taking place when an embryo, or fertilized egg, implants in the uterus. Protecting nonviable in vitro embryos raises questions about contraception that prevents implantation 鈥 like some IUDs, the devices placed inside a uterus to prevent pregnancy. Personhood arises in tax law, too: Georgia, for instance, allows tax breaks for an 鈥渦nborn child with a detectable heartbeat.鈥

A听February poll shows 66% of Americans oppose 鈥渃onsidering frozen embryos as people and holding those who destroy them legally responsible.鈥

What does 鈥撎齛nd doesn鈥檛 鈥撎齮he new law do?

On March 6, Alabama lawmakers enacted a narrowly focused bill that shields IVF service providers from prosecution related to the damage or destruction of an embryo at any point in the IVF process. It also offers limited protection to IVF-related manufacturers.听

The Alabama court case came about because frozen embryos belonging to couples undergoing IVF treatment at an Alabama clinic were destroyed. Those couples sued the clinic for negligence and damages under the state鈥檚 Wrongful Death of a Minor Act.听

The state Supreme Court, in its February decision, considered whether the frozen embryos qualified as minor children. The court said they do. Referencing the state constitution, which affirms the rights of unborn children, the court wrote that unborn children are children 鈥渨ithout exception based on developmental stage, physical location, or any other ancillary characteristics.鈥澨

Immediately following that ruling, at least three of Alabama鈥檚 eight IVF clinics and a local company that ships embryos shut down, leaving clients in limbo.

The new state law offered enough assurance to IVF providers that two of the Alabama clinics that had halted treatments resumed business within a day of the law鈥檚 enactment.听But the Center for Reproductive Medicine in Mobile remains closed, stating that the law 鈥渇alls short鈥 and 鈥渓eaves challenges for physicians and fertility clinics trying to help deserving families have children of their own.鈥澨

IVF is physically painful, emotionally draining, and expensive. Common practice is to create multiple embryos at a time, to keep procedures to a minimum. The extras are frozen, for future siblings or to use if an implantation fails. About 2% of babies born in the United States are a result of IVF.听

How is this impacting the rest of the country?

Other states are watching. A day after Governor Ivey signed the Alabama law, Iowa鈥檚 House passed a fetal homicide bill that defines an unborn person as existing 鈥渇rom fertilization to live birth.鈥 Florida has now postponed a fetal personhood bill amid concerns about impacting IVF treatments.听

State laws surrounding reproductive rights reflect the complexity and diversity of anti-abortion views on when life begins. Not all states with personhood laws have complete bans on abortion; states that qualify life as being viable, implanted, or 鈥渋n the womb鈥 may grant rights to unborn children or their parents. But they also allow for some early-term abortions. Frozen embryos fall outside that definition of life.

Some states also have specific IVF provisions in their personhood laws. Arizona, for one, acknowledges life 鈥渁t every stage of development鈥 but also states its law is not to be used against IVF providers.

The ruling has fueled momentum for anti-abortion groups; the Alliance Defending Freedom called it a 鈥渢remendous victory for life.鈥 Reproductive rights advocates are raising alarms; the Guttmacher Institute wrote that Alabama鈥檚 ruling 鈥渃ould have devastating repercussions for families seeking IVF treatment & far beyond.鈥澨

The case has made it into the presidential race, with President Joe Biden linking the Alabama decision to the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 ruling two summers ago giving states jurisdiction over abortion access. And former President Donald Trump said on the campaign trail that he supports IVF, while his broader record reflects the goals of anti-abortion conservatives.听

The extremity of the court鈥檚 decision is an inflection point, says Professor Rosen. 鈥淎nd regardless of the direction,鈥 she adds, 鈥渋t has truly introduced a tremendous amount of uncertainty and anxiety and chaos.鈥澨

That uncertainty means anything is possible, especially in an election year when reproductive rights are front and center. 鈥淲hile I can鈥檛 predict the next step,鈥 says Susan Pace Hamill, a professor at the University of Alabama School of Law, 鈥渢his is not over.鈥