President Donald Trump recently announced a plan to expand access to in vitro fertilization (IVF) by making it more affordable and widely available through employer health insurance. The proposal, framed as a measure to help couples struggling with infertility, would allow employers to offer IVF coverage as a standard health benefit and would include partnerships with drug manufacturers like EMD Serono to reduce the cost of fertility medications. While the initiative is being praised in some circles as “pro-family,” it raises profound moral concerns for those who hold that every human life—no matter how small—deserves full protection and dignity from the moment of conception.
From a pro-life perspective, IVF cannot be separated from the destruction and commodification of human life. Each IVF cycle typically involves the creation of multiple embryos, many of which will never be implanted in a womb. Some are destroyed immediately, others are frozen indefinitely, and still others die during thawing or implantation. Even if the procedure succeeds in bringing one child to term, countless brothers and sisters have been lost in the process. These are not mere “cells” but unique human beings with their own DNA and inherent right to life. Treating embryos as disposable biological material contradicts the very foundation of a truly pro-life ethic.
Furthermore, IVF introduces a troubling commodification of children. Embryos are often graded, selected, and discarded based on perceived “quality” or genetic fitness, reducing human life to a marketplace of options and outcomes. Making IVF more affordable and accessible would only expand this industry of loss, where life is manufactured, screened, and often destroyed in the name of helping others conceive. A society that claims to defend life cannot turn a blind eye to the silent tragedy occurring in fertility clinics each day.
True pro-life compassion means supporting families without compromising the sanctity of life. Couples facing infertility deserve real care—medical, emotional, and spiritual—but not at the expense of the smallest and most vulnerable members of the human family. Ethical alternatives exist: restorative reproductive medicine, natural fertility awareness, and holistic health approaches that seek to heal rather than bypass the body’s natural processes. Adoption and foster care, too, remain profound expressions of love that uphold life rather than endanger it.
While President Trump’s intention to help families may be sincere, expanding IVF access is not a pro-life policy. It normalizes the destruction of embryos, turns children into commodities, and undermines the principle that every human life is sacred. Those who cherish the cause of life must continue to speak clearly: no desire for parenthood, however heartfelt, can justify taking or discarding human lives in the process. True support for families begins with protecting all children—especially those who cannot yet speak for themselves.