Latest news with #recordlow
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Health
- Yahoo
Calls to make low-cost IVF more accessible in Australia
Vikki Mai Murphy always knew she wanted to be a mum but after months of negative pregnancy tests she and her partner Sean realised they would need some extra help. Following a round of intrauterine insemination (IUI), where prepared sperm is placed directly into a woman's uterus, Ms Murphy was thrilled to finally see a positive result for the first time. But almost eight weeks later, she discovered the pregnancy was ectopic and would have to be removed. In the resulting surgery she lost one of her fallopian tubes and doctors told her she would need to undergo IVF in order to successfully fall pregnant in future. "I just bawled and kept asking if I could still have my babies ... it just crushed me," Ms Murphy told AAP. The couple began to explore their IVF options and quickly realised the cost per round would be between $10,000 and $15,000. "We both just decided we wanted to throw everything at it and worry about the costs later," Ms Murphy said. For many people hoping to become parents, cost-of-living pressures are deterring them from fertility treatment. With Australia posting a record-low fertility rate in 2024, experts say low-cost IVF options will be crucial to addressing the decline in births. The average number of children born per woman was 1.51 in 2024, well below the 1.8 in 2014. In 2022, almost 109,000 IVF cycles were performed resulting in the birth of 20,058 babies. Almost half of Australians surveyed by Connect IVF said fertility services were not affordable. Connect IVF was one of the few affordable clinics in an industry that had been driven by a wave of corporatisation, director Brendan Ayres said. "(Our clinics) see a broad section of Australians and we get a disproportionate number of people from lower socioeconomic groups who need fertility treatment," he said. "We also have a number of patients who have been to other clinics and paid tens of thousands of dollars without success and are at their financial wits' end." Ms Murphy discovered Connect IVF by a chance internet search and the clinic was able to accommodate her for her next menstrual cycle. "The cost was substantially lower than other clinics because they bulk-billed the IVF cycle," she said. "It also allowed us to pay for a private obstetrician during my pregnancy, which we wouldn't have been able to afford if we'd had to pay up to $15,000 for the IVF." Ms Murphy ended up with four embryos from the round, which led to her three-year-old son Beau and one-year-old daughter Maia. "I love being a mum. It was such a journey and if I could have just looked into the future and seen my babies it would have made such a difference," she said. "People might think if they pay more money there might be more chance of having a baby, but I have friends who have paid thousands more than us with no success." While the Australian government supports parts of IVF through Medicare, it was not linked to the consumer price index, meaning the gap increased over time, Mr Ayres said. "Australia is a world leader in the technology of IVF but the funding hasn't followed," he said. "There also needs to be additions to Medicare item numbers to expand to all areas such as donor IVF which currently isn't covered."

Malay Mail
4 days ago
- Business
- Malay Mail
Indonesia's poverty rate hits 20-year low amid reforms, but rural gap persists, says stats agency
JAKARTA, July 26 — The number of Indonesians living under the poverty line has hit a record low for the past two decades, the country's statistics bureau said yesterday. According to the Central Statistics Agency, there were roughly 23.85 million Indonesians living in poverty as of March this year — representing 8.47 per cent of the country's total population of 280 million. BPS categorises people living off Rp 609,160 a month, about US$37 (RM156), as poor. 'The poverty line figure for 2025 is the lowest for the past two decades,' the agency's senior official, Ateng Hartono, told a press conference. However, the agency noted the significant gap between big cities and rural areas, with villages still seeing a higher poverty rate. This photo taken on June 11, 2025 shows a general view of traditional raised stilt houses in Bangsal, South Sumatra. The Central Statistics Agency noted the significant gap between big cities and rural areas, with villages still seeing a higher poverty rate. — AFP pic Jakarta last week struck a trade deal with the United States that will see Indonesian goods hit with a 19 per cent tariff — lower than the threatened rate of 32 per cent. According to Washington, nearly all US goods will be able to enter Indonesia tariff-free. Indonesia's Coordinating Minister of Economics Airlangga Hartarto said earlier this week that if Washington had insisted on the 32 per cent tariff, around one million Indonesians could lose their jobs and the poverty rate could increase. — AFP


CNA
5 days ago
- Business
- CNA
Indonesia says its poverty rate the lowest in two decades
JAKARTA: The number of Indonesians living under the poverty line has hit a record low for the past two decades, the country's statistics bureau said on Friday (Jul 25). According to the Central Statistics Agency, there were roughly 23.85 million Indonesians living in poverty as of March this year - representing 8.47 per cent of the country's total population of 280 million. BPS categorises people living off IDR609,160 a month, about US$37, as poor. "The poverty line figure for 2025 is the lowest for the past two decades," the agency's senior official, Ateng Hartono, told a press conference. However, the agency noted the significant gap between big cities and rural areas, with villages still seeing a higher poverty rate. Jakarta last week struck a trade deal with the United States that will see Indonesian goods hit with a 19 per cent tariff - lower than the threatened rate of 32 per cent. According to Washington, nearly all US goods will be able to enter Indonesia tariff-free.