Wednesday, July 15, 2026
39.1 C
New Delhi

WHO urges countries to make fertility care affordable and accessible

WHO urges countries to make fertility care affordable and accessible

.

NEW DELHI: The World Health Organisation (WHO) on Friday urged countries — including India — to make fertility care safer, fairer and affordable, releasing its first-ever global guideline on the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of infertility.Infertility affects 1 in 6 adults of reproductive age, yet access to fertility services remains limited and costly. In many countries, including India, treatment is largely paid out-of-pocket, leaving couples to bear catastrophic expenses. A single IVF cycle can cost more than an average family’s annual income, pushing many toward unregulated or unproven therapies.Calling infertility “one of the most overlooked public-health challenges,” WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said millions are priced out of care or forced to choose between treatment and financial security.The guideline issues 40 recommendations to strengthen early diagnosis, cost-effective treatment pathways and integration of fertility services into national health systems. It stresses prevention through awareness about fertility, age-related decline, healthy lifestyles, and tackling leading causes such as untreated sexually transmitted infections and tobacco use.WHO also highlights the emotional burden — depression, anxiety, stigma and isolation — and calls for routine psychosocial support. Countries have been asked to adapt the recommendations to local contexts, expand insurance or public financing, and align fertility care with rights-based reproductive health policies.“The prevention and treatment of infertility must be grounded in gender equality and reproductive rights,” said Dr Pascale Allotey of WHOs Department of Sexual, Reproductive, Maternal, Child and Adolescent Health and Ageing and the United Nations’ Special Programme on Human Reproduction (HRP).Future updates will address fertility preservation, third-party reproduction and the impact of pre-existing medical conditions.

Go to Source

Hot this week

A Canadian entrepreneur sold his tech company for millions, then spent $1.5 million building tiny homes for people without homes

Image: University of New Brunswick For many people experiencing homelessness, the biggest challenge is not just finding temporary shelter but securing a stable place to rebuild their lives. Read More

‘Protection of children is state’s responsibility’: Pak lawmaker seeks social media ban for under-16s

Representative image (AI-generated) A lawmaker in Pakistan’s Punjab has sought a ban on social media accounts for children under the age of 16 and also called for a similar action across the country. Read More

Iran threatens to block more trade routes as US launches fresh strikes

Getty Images Ella Kipling 21 minutes ago Iran has threatened to block further trading routes in the region, as the US launched a fresh wave of strikes on military targets. Read More

Trump retreat over Hormuz tolls suggests he is struggling to end Iran war

Getty Images Anthony Zurcher, North America correspondent and Kayla Epstein 14 July 2026 Updated 15 July 2026 00:17 BST Donald Trump’s latest Iran war demand lasted all of 24 hours and suggests a president searc Read More

Strait of Hormuz ‘faultline’ exposes weakness of the US-Iran deal

Reuters Lyse Doucet Chief International Correspondent 14 July 2026 The fragile “no war, no peace” situation since the US and Iran signed a tentative deal last month now seems to have tipped into war. Read More

Topics

A Canadian entrepreneur sold his tech company for millions, then spent $1.5 million building tiny homes for people without homes

Image: University of New Brunswick For many people experiencing homelessness, the biggest challenge is not just finding temporary shelter but securing a stable place to rebuild their lives. Read More

‘Protection of children is state’s responsibility’: Pak lawmaker seeks social media ban for under-16s

Representative image (AI-generated) A lawmaker in Pakistan’s Punjab has sought a ban on social media accounts for children under the age of 16 and also called for a similar action across the country. Read More

Iran threatens to block more trade routes as US launches fresh strikes

Getty Images Ella Kipling 21 minutes ago Iran has threatened to block further trading routes in the region, as the US launched a fresh wave of strikes on military targets. Read More

Trump retreat over Hormuz tolls suggests he is struggling to end Iran war

Getty Images Anthony Zurcher, North America correspondent and Kayla Epstein 14 July 2026 Updated 15 July 2026 00:17 BST Donald Trump’s latest Iran war demand lasted all of 24 hours and suggests a president searc Read More

Strait of Hormuz ‘faultline’ exposes weakness of the US-Iran deal

Reuters Lyse Doucet Chief International Correspondent 14 July 2026 The fragile “no war, no peace” situation since the US and Iran signed a tentative deal last month now seems to have tipped into war. Read More

Three killed as Russian bombing of Odesa continues

Reuters Michael Sheils McNamee 1 hour ago Three people have been killed following an overnight Russian attack on the Black Sea port of Odesa, according to a local official. Read More

China economic growth falls sharply, missing target

VCG via Getty Images Peter Hoskins Business reporter 15 July 2026, 03:22 BST Updated 1 hour ago China’s economic growth slowed sharply between the start of April and end of June as weak domestic demand and th Read More

Big setback for Prashant Kishor, four Jan Suraaj leaders switch to BJP before Bankipur bypoll

Prashant Kishor’s Jan Suraaj leaders switch to BJP ahead of Bankipur bypoll NEW DELHI: In a setback to Jan Suraaj founder Prashant Kishor ahead of the Bankipur Assembly bypoll, several party leaders, including candidates who Read More

Related Articles