Alignment, Anticipation, Adaptation, or Lagging Behind? Age-Based Regulations in Assisted Reproduction and Late Fertility

Marie-Caroline Compans (Corresponding author)

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

This paper focuses on age restrictions on access to infertility treatments and eligibility for their public reimbursement, exploring their relevancy in contexts of rising late birth rates (40+). I explore how age-based reimbursement policies for in vitro fertilization treatments have responded to these fertility trends in 27 high-income countries and in which regulatory frameworks for medically assisted reproduction (MAR) very late births (45+) have particularly increased. First, I show that while age limits for treatment reimbursement are well aligned with the prevalence of late fertility in some national contexts, in most countries, strict age restrictions are lagging behind the rise in late births. In others, pronatalist policies have prompted permissive age criteria or law revisions, anticipating or adapting to rising trends in late births. Second, the rise in very late births has been limited in some contexts with strict age-based rules. However, the analysis suggests that the impact of MAR on very late births may also be influenced by contextual factors other than regulations.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1319-1351
Number of pages33
JournalPopulation and Development Review
Volume50
Issue number4
Early online date30 Sept 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2024

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 504006 Demography

Keywords

  • age-based regulations
  • childbearing norms
  • late fertility
  • MAR policies
  • medically assisted reproduction (MAR)

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