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Alabama has a new law aimed at protecting in vitro fertilization (IVF).

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The process of IVF in a lab

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Alabama has a new law aimed at protecting in vitro fertilization (IVF).

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Yesterday, the state’s Republican-controlled legislature passed a measure shielding IVF providers, clinics, and patients from legal liability. Gov. Kay Ivey (R) promptly signed the bill into law last night. Alabama lawmakers scrambled to create the legislation after the state Supreme Court ruled that frozen embryos are children, endangering the future of IVF in the state. The decision prompted Alabama’s three major fertility clinics to pause IVF services, amid fears they could get sued if embryos were mishandled. Now, Ivey says the clinics should be able to resume IVF services “immediately.” However, not everyone feels that way.

What do you mean?

While some IVF clinics in the state plan to reopen soon, at least one facility plans to keep its doors shut. That’s because the law doesn’t address the court’s decision deeming frozen embryos as children. As a result, providers and families are raising questions about how to handle frozen embryos that are currently in storage. Meanwhile, legal experts are concerned patients won’t be able to sue clinics for malpractice if an embryo is destroyed or damaged. Alabama’s lawmakers have maintained the new legislation is a short-term fix that's meant to reopen IVF clinics and that they plan to work on a more permanent solution.

theSkimm

Alabama's new law is receiving mixed reviews. While some clinics are glad to be able to resume services soon, law experts are flagging the legislation creates more of a legal gray area that may not protect patients.

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