Are Embryos Children? The Alabama Supreme Court Says Yes
This article will examine the Alabama Supreme Court’s decision in LePage v. Mobile Infirmary Clinic and its consequences for Americans using fertility services.

This article will examine the Alabama Supreme Court’s decision in LePage v. Mobile Infirmary Clinic and its consequences for Americans using fertility services.
Targeted restrictions on IVF Provision – or TRIP laws – stand to rob patients of their ability to build their families by compelling physicians to provide less effective, more expensive care.
When regulating assisted reproduction, it is important to proceed cautiously and to consider how proposals may adversely impact family recognition.
Treating embryos more like persons will ultimately result in fewer people born and fewer families formed.
How did we get to a place where women must work an “infertility shift” beyond their full-time jobs to access medical care?
In the aftermath of Dobbs, as barriers to accessing fertility care increase, one area of growing interest is informal (“DIY”) sperm donation.
At least four features of IVF face scrutiny and possible restriction in the face of growing embryo protection regulation.
Four potential avenues for structuring a societal discourse on reproductive genetic innovation in the U.S.