County that pioneered IVF 40 years ago becomes the latest to scrap the fertility treatment for free on the NHS

0
442

Those couples who had already been referred for IVF will still receive one cycle, after the plans initially proposed at the start of the year went ahead. 

‘Financially necessary’ 

Dr Gary Howsam, chair of the CCG, said it was ‘one of the hardest decisions we’ve had to take’ but said it was ‘financially necessary’.

In a statement, he added: ‘I think there’s a recognition that the NHS funding situation is desperate in our region.

‘The CCG has finite resources to fund a whole range of health services and treatments.

‘We need to save £46.5 million this financial year, and so we have had to review all areas of our spending and to make some difficult decisions.’ 

Nearly 2,400 women have since hit back at the decision and have signed a petition begging for the CCG to reverse its stance.

The first human egg was fertilised using IVF in a Cambridge laboratory in 1978 by biologist Robert Edwards.

WHEN IS IVF OFFERED?

IVF is only offered on the NHS if certain criteria are met. If you don’t meet these criteria, you may need to pay for private treatment.

In 2013, the NICE published new fertility guidelines that made recommendations about who should have access to the treatment on the NHS in England and Wales.

However, individual NHS Clinical Commissioning Groups make the final decision about who can access it in their local area, and their criteria may be stricter.

According to NICE, women aged under 40 should be offered three cycles of IVF treatment on the NHS if:

they’ve been trying to get pregnant through regular unprotected sex for two years, or they’ve not been able to get pregnant after 12 cycles of artificial insemination.

If you turn 40 during treatment, the current cycle will be completed, but further cycles should not be offered.

If tests show that IVF is the only treatment likely to help you get pregnant, you should be referred for IVF straight away.

Source: NHS Choices 

As a result of their breakthrough, nearly four million children have been born using the technique – allowing many infertile women to start their dream family.  

IVF and the guidelines

Currently, IVF is only offered on the NHS if certain criteria are met. Patients who don’t are usually left with no alternative but to pay for private treatment. 

In 2013, NICE published new fertility guidelines about who should have access to the treatment in England and Wales.

The watchdog recommends that women under 40 should be offered three cycles for free if they have been trying to conceive for three years.

However, individual CCGs make the final decision about who can access it in their local area, and their criteria may be stricter. 

Where else has had funding cuts? 

Basildon and Brentwood CCG was the first to take such drastic action back in November in a step it said would save £14 million.

Croydon became the second in England to stop funding IVF. Its CCG took the decision in a bid to save £836,000 a year.

But it is believed many others could follow suit amid the postcode lottery created by CCGs who defy national guidelines.

The news follows MailOnline’s revelation that IVF could be limited to just HIV patients and cancer survivors left infertile from treatment in one London borough.

In light of the NHS financial crisis, Richmond CCG in south-west London proposed to change its policy on who will be eligible to receive fertility treatment. 

It stated it needs to make £13 million in savings in the next financial year – and IVF will be the first service to be slashed.  

Source

2 of 2

LEAVE A REPLY