Latest news with #NationalPerinatalEpidemiologyandStatisticsUnit

Sydney Morning Herald
26-07-2025
- Health
- Sydney Morning Herald
Rebecca was one of the first IVF babies. We now know how many there have been since
The study, published in Fertility and Sterility, used statistical estimates to fill in the gaps left by clinics that had not reported their results. Preliminary data from 2019 to 2024 indicates that another 3 to 4 million IVF babies have been born since the study's 2018 cut-off, said Professor Georgina Chambers, custodian of the Australian and New Zealand Assisted Reproductive Technology Database, and director of UNSW's National Perinatal Epidemiology and Statistics Unit. As IVF has become an increasingly effective and safe mainstream medical treatment, many countries have turned to IVF to support pronatalist policies, Chambers said. 'You've got governments in places like Japan, China and South Korea offering a lot of financial support for IVF treatment to improve fertility rates,' Chambers said. Asia reported just 8 per cent of IVF births in the 1990s, rapidly accelerating in the 2000s to contribute 33 per cent by 2018. Australia's declining fertility rate was the opening gambit in a road map for Australia's national fertility policy, commissioned by the Fertility Society of Australia and New Zealand and co-authored by former federal health minister Greg Hunt. The trouble is, IVF barely makes a dent in declining fertility rates, said Robert Norman, a professor of reproductive and periconceptual medicine at the University of Adelaide. 'IVF is a fantastic medical technology for infertility … it's not the great hope for the future of fertility rates,' he said. The replacement fertility rate – the average number of children to have to maintain a stable population size (excluding migration) – is typically 2.1 births per woman. Countries including South Korea (0.75), Singapore (0.97), Japan (1.15) and China (1) are well below that level. Loading While a record 17,963 IVF babies were born in Australia in 2022, Australia's fertility rate was 1.5 in 2023, and may have fallen to 1.4. IVF accounts for about 5 per cent of Australia's total fertility rate. '[Some in the] IVF industry will point to fertility rates and argue that we need more IVF, that it needs to be more accessible and all women should have the opportunity to freeze their eggs. But it won't make a difference if society is geared up socially and economically against having children,' Norman said. Although the chance of having a baby for women starting IVF after 42 is remote, Norman said it was 'not unusual to have people turning up in their 40s and say: 'I'm ready to have children now.'' Chambers said statistics like 'one child is born via IVF every 35 seconds somewhere in the world' and 'one in 16 children in Australia are born after IVF', may suggest IVF will solve Australia's declining fertility rate, but there's a risk it can have an adverse, reverse effect. 'If people think 'I can turn to IVF when I'm older', they may potentially postpone having children. IVF is less successful the older you get, and we know that the later you have children, the fewer children you will have,' she said. 'Overall, it doesn't have a huge impact, but it does increase the age-specific fertility rate of older women – aged over 33 – which only partially compensates for declining fertility rates in younger women.' Featherstone co-founded Fertility Matters with Australia's first IVF baby, Candice Thum (née Reed), to develop free school programs designed to educate teenagers about fertility – most notably that it declines with age, and the role of both sexes – after being struck by how little their adult friends knew about fertility health. Loading 'These are really smart young men and women who didn't know the obvious statistics and information,' Featherstone said. It has been a year of significant reputational damage for Australia's IVF industry. In June, health ministers launched a rapid review of the IVF sector after two devastating embryo transfer errors at Monash IVF clinics in Brisbane and Melbourne.

The Age
26-07-2025
- Health
- The Age
Rebecca was one of the first IVF babies. We now know how many there have been since
The study, published in Fertility and Sterility, used statistical estimates to fill in the gaps left by clinics that had not reported their results. Preliminary data from 2019 to 2024 indicates that another 3 to 4 million IVF babies have been born since the study's 2018 cut-off, said Professor Georgina Chambers, custodian of the Australian and New Zealand Assisted Reproductive Technology Database, and director of UNSW's National Perinatal Epidemiology and Statistics Unit. As IVF has become an increasingly effective and safe mainstream medical treatment, many countries have turned to IVF to support pronatalist policies, Chambers said. 'You've got governments in places like Japan, China and South Korea offering a lot of financial support for IVF treatment to improve fertility rates,' Chambers said. Asia reported just 8 per cent of IVF births in the 1990s, rapidly accelerating in the 2000s to contribute 33 per cent by 2018. Australia's declining fertility rate was the opening gambit in a road map for Australia's national fertility policy, commissioned by the Fertility Society of Australia and New Zealand and co-authored by former federal health minister Greg Hunt. The trouble is, IVF barely makes a dent in declining fertility rates, said Robert Norman, a professor of reproductive and periconceptual medicine at the University of Adelaide. 'IVF is a fantastic medical technology for infertility … it's not the great hope for the future of fertility rates,' he said. The replacement fertility rate – the average number of children to have to maintain a stable population size (excluding migration) – is typically 2.1 births per woman. Countries including South Korea (0.75), Singapore (0.97), Japan (1.15) and China (1) are well below that level. Loading While a record 17,963 IVF babies were born in Australia in 2022, Australia's fertility rate was 1.5 in 2023, and may have fallen to 1.4. IVF accounts for about 5 per cent of Australia's total fertility rate. '[Some in the] IVF industry will point to fertility rates and argue that we need more IVF, that it needs to be more accessible and all women should have the opportunity to freeze their eggs. But it won't make a difference if society is geared up socially and economically against having children,' Norman said. Although the chance of having a baby for women starting IVF after 42 is remote, Norman said it was 'not unusual to have people turning up in their 40s and say: 'I'm ready to have children now.'' Chambers said statistics like 'one child is born via IVF every 35 seconds somewhere in the world' and 'one in 16 children in Australia are born after IVF', may suggest IVF will solve Australia's declining fertility rate, but there's a risk it can have an adverse, reverse effect. 'If people think 'I can turn to IVF when I'm older', they may potentially postpone having children. IVF is less successful the older you get, and we know that the later you have children, the fewer children you will have,' she said. 'Overall, it doesn't have a huge impact, but it does increase the age-specific fertility rate of older women – aged over 33 – which only partially compensates for declining fertility rates in younger women.' Featherstone co-founded Fertility Matters with Australia's first IVF baby, Candice Thum (née Reed), to develop free school programs designed to educate teenagers about fertility – most notably that it declines with age, and the role of both sexes – after being struck by how little their adult friends knew about fertility health. Loading 'These are really smart young men and women who didn't know the obvious statistics and information,' Featherstone said. It has been a year of significant reputational damage for Australia's IVF industry. In June, health ministers launched a rapid review of the IVF sector after two devastating embryo transfer errors at Monash IVF clinics in Brisbane and Melbourne.