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Older women exploited by IVF clinics, says fertility watchdog

Women's rights > blog > Older women exploited by IVF clinics, says fertility watchdog

Older women are being exploited by IVF clinics ‘trading on hope’, the fertility watchdog has warned.

 

Sally Cheshire, chairwoman of the Human Fertilization and Embryology Authority (HFEA), told the Daily Telegraph some private clinics were using ‘selective success rates’ to target older women.

IVF is less likely to be successful as a woman gets older.

 

Since 2004 the number of women in their 40s undergoing fertility treatment has doubled to 10,835 in 2017.

 

The new figures, published by the Telegraph, show that among those using their own eggs, just 75 women aged 42 to 43 will end up with a baby.

 

For those over 44, there was a success rate of just 1% between 2004 and 2017.

 

In an interview with the newspaper, Cheshire called for clinics to be ‘honest and transparent’ with women about their chances of success.

 

“What the clinics shouldn’t be doing is trading on that hope,” she said.

 

The UK National Health Service (NHS) guidelines recommend that women under 40 should be offered three full cycles of IVF, while those between 40 and 42 should be offered one full cycle. However eligibility criteria varies in different areas of the country.

 

IVF is not usually recommended for women over the age of 42 because of low success rates.

 

Cheshire said some parts of the sector were using ‘blatant’ sales tactics to persuade ‘vulnerable’ women to undergo treatment.

 

The 50-year-old said she had even been offered IVF treatments herself, by staff who were unaware of her role with the regulator, at a visit to a fertility show in Manchester.

 

“We now see things like ‘guaranteed baby or your money back,” she said.

 

Cheshire also called for the watchdog to be given powers to regulate prices, saying that some private centers were charging up to £20,000 for cycles — four times as much as she said treatments should cost.

 

She said prices were often inflated by the growing use of ‘add-on treatments’, such as embryo glue and endometrial scratches, offered by clinics to boost chances of success.

 

However, earlier this year the watchdog, which regulates all fertility services in the UK, warned that these were being offered without conclusive evidence that they increase the chance of pregnancy.

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