Trump Unveils Fertility Benefit, Maternal Health Initiative

President Trump announced a new fertility benefit option for employers and a maternal healthcare initiative at a White House event. The plan includes expanding IVF access, launching the Moms.gov website, and investing $50 billion in rural healthcare. The administration also highlighted reduced IVF drug costs and childcare reforms to support families. Trump framed these policies as part of a broader "pro-family agenda" to encourage childbirth.

Key Points: Trump Announces Fertility, Maternal Healthcare Plan

  • New fertility benefit option for employers outside health insurance
  • Moms.gov website launched for maternal resources
  • IVF drug cost reduced from $966 to $168
  • $50 billion rural healthcare investment planned
3 min read

Trump unveils new fertility benefit option, maternal healthcare initiative

President Trump announces new fertility benefit option for employers and maternal healthcare initiative, including Moms.gov website and IVF access expansion.

"Your zip code should not determine your mortality rate if you're having a baby. - Dr Mehmet Oz"

Washington, May 11

President Donald Trump on Monday announced a new fertility benefit option for employers and launched a maternal healthcare initiative aimed at expanding access to IVF, childcare and rural maternal care across the United States.

Speaking at a White House event, Trump said the Department of Labor would formally create a fertility benefit option that employers could offer outside traditional health insurance plans.

"Most healthcare plans do not cover these benefits," Trump said. "This will be a supplemental option available to those who need it."

The President said the initiative would help millions of American families struggling with fertility treatment costs and broader maternal healthcare challenges.

"By offering coverage for care at every step, the fertility journey is a very interesting one, very complex it was, and we're making it much simpler," Trump said.

He credited Senator Katie Britt with drawing his attention to the issue of IVF access after an Alabama court ruling created uncertainty around fertility treatment.

"She said, sir, we have to do something," Trump said. "And I became the father of fertility."

Trump said the administration was also launching Moms.gov, a new federal website designed to centralise resources for mothers and families.

"Moms.gov is online right now," he said. "I encourage every mom to visit this new page where they will find helpful information about clinical care, pregnancy resources, nutrition tips, Trump Rx and Trump accounts."

Officials said the website would include information on prenatal and postpartum care, childcare support and fertility resources.

The administration also highlighted TrumpRx.gov, a prescription drug pricing programme that Trump claimed had sharply reduced fertility medication costs.

"One drug commonly used in IVF has gone from $966 to $168," Trump said.

Dr Mehmet Oz said rural maternal healthcare remained a major concern, noting that maternal mortality rates were significantly higher in rural America.

"Your zip code should not determine your mortality rate if you're having a baby," Oz said.

He pointed to a $50 billion rural healthcare investment included in the administration's tax package and said states were using telehealth and expanded local care systems to improve maternal outcomes.

Olivia Walton, speaking on behalf of the "Healthy Moms, Healthy Babies America" campaign, described the funding as "a transformative opportunity to invest in maternal healthcare".

"We want to cut the US maternal death rate in half in five years," Walton said.

Trump also announced childcare reforms aimed at reducing costs and expanding parental choice.

Dr Alex Adams said the reforms would "bring faith-based providers back to the table" and reduce federal mandates that increased childcare costs.

"We're restoring parental choice," Adams said.

Trump repeatedly framed the policies as part of a broader "pro-family agenda" focused on encouraging childbirth and supporting young families.

"We've done more for young parents than any administration ever in history," he said.

The event also featured remarks from Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who warned that declining fertility rates represented "an existential crisis" for the country.

"We now have a president who is trying to encourage childbirth and motherhood in this country," Kennedy said.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Priya S
I'm a doctor in Bangalore, and our rural maternal mortality rates are still high despite government programs. The US spending $50 billion on rural healthcare sounds impressive. But Trump claiming to be "father of fertility" seems a bit self-congratulatory - policies should speak for themselves, not need such grand statements 🤔
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Rohit P
Good to see any country focusing on family welfare. But the Moms.gov website mentioning "Trump Rx and Trump accounts" sounds like political branding of public services. In India, we have Ayushman Bharat and PM Jan Arogya Yojana, but they're named after the schemes, not the leader. The US could learn from our model of depoliticized healthcare names.
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James A
As someone who lived in India for work, I appreciate this shift in US policy. Indian families spend lakhs on IVF often without insurance. If the US can make fertility treatment affordable, maybe it'll pressure Indian insurance companies to cover it too. The interconnected world means good policies cross borders.
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Nisha Z
I wish Indian politicians would talk about fertility and maternal health with this much attention. Our maternal death rate in rural UP and Bihar is still alarming. Trump's focus on "rural maternal care" is exactly what we need too. And $50 billion? That's roughly Rs 4 lakh crore - we could use that kind of investment in our healthcare system.
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Vikram M
Being a father of twins via IVF, I know the struggle. But "I became the father of fertility" sounds like a political joke, not policy. The substance - expanding IVF access and rural care -

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