A consultant obstetrician and gynaecologist, Olusanjo Moses, has called for in vitro fertilization (IVF) in health insurance plans to enable more individuals and couples to achieve their dream of having a baby.
Mr Moses, a fertility specialist and co-founder of M2 Specialist Hospital, said this in an interview on Thursday in Lagos.
IVF is one of the assisted reproductive technology (ART) available to help people with fertility problems have a baby. IVF helps with fertilization, embryo development, and implantation so one can get pregnant.
It works by using a combination of medicines and surgical procedures to help sperm fertilise an egg and help the fertilised egg implant in the uterus.
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), infertility affects millions of people – and has an impact on their families and communities. WHO said that approximately one in every six people of reproductive age worldwide experience infertility in their lifetime.
Moses, however, bemoaned the absence of fertility care in national health coverage benefit packages, acknowledging that IVF technologies are still largely unavailable, inaccessible and unaffordable for many citizens.
He stressed the need to facilitate national policy to incorporate infertility within an enabling legal and policy framework.
According to him, the fees for a cycle of IVF include medicines, procedures, anaesthesia, ultrasounds, blood tests, lab work, and embryo storage.
He emphasised that the exact cost of a single IVF cycle varies and runs into millions of naira.
“IVF is expensive, and most of our health insurance does not cover IVF. And therefore, many of our women and our couples have to pay out of pocket. If there could be legislation in such a way that even if it is just a co-payment, part payment, or 50 per cent of the cost of IVF can be borne by the health insurance. I think it will go a long way in reducing the burden of financial expenditure on our population,” he said.
He added that medicines, equipment, and consumables utilised for the techniques were imported, noting that tax exemption on some equipment investment in local production of medicine and consumables would assist in reducing the cost of IVF.
Moses disclosed that to expand access to IVF service in the country, M2 Specialist Hospital was established in Lagos, with fertility and reproductive health at the heart of its operation.
He disclosed that the hospital was on a mission to provide top-notch, patient-centred fertility treatments and reproductive health care using the latest advancements in evidence-based medicine.
On how IVF works, Mr Moses said medication is first given to make several of the patient’s eggs mature and ready for fertilisation.
“Then the doctor takes the eggs out of the patient’s body and mixes them with sperm in a lab to help the sperm fertilise the eggs. Thereafter, they put one or more fertilised eggs (embryos) directly into the uterus. Pregnancy happens if any of the embryos implant in the lining of the uterus,” he said.
Mr Moses added that babies conceived through IVF are not different from babies conceived naturally, noting that awareness and uptake of IVF was increasing among couples.
Reports from Planned Parenthood showed that IVF has many steps and takes several months to complete the whole process.
It noted that it sometimes works on the first try, but many people need more than one round of IVF to get pregnant.
It added that IVF definitely increases the chances of pregnancy for people with fertility problems, warning that there’s no guarantee, saying, “Everyone’s body is different, and IVF won’t work for everyone.”
Data from WHO revealed that assisted reproduction technologies have been available for more than three decades, with millions of children born worldwide from ART interventions such as IVF.
(NAN)