

This week, ex-Olympian swimmer Lisa Curry announced she was trying for a baby using IVF. In an interview with New idea, the 51-year-old said she was trying for her fourth baby with her new partner, 31-year-old Joel Walkenhorst. She already has three children with her former partner Grant Kenny – Jaimi, 25, Morgan, 22, and Jett, 18.
In the exclusive interview with New Idea, Curry said she and Joel had met with IVF specialists and have begun a formal cycle of fertility treatment.
This post is written by researcher in applied ethics and children welfare, Mianna Lotz. In it Lotz looks at access and eligibility to IVF for older women and what the changes are of getting pregnant for women older than the age of 44.
By MIANNA LOTZ
Considerable public controversy exists around the question of access to in-vitro fertilisation treatment (IVF) for older women. Some support unlimited, publicly-funded access for all infertile women and couples, irrespective of age. Others beg to differ.
Many people support restrictions on eligibility and access, including increases to the costs borne by individuals. They also oppose the use of tax revenue to fund what is, after all, an expensive procedure drawing on finite health resources.