According to the World Health Organization (WHO), 1 in 6 people globally are impacted by infertility. In the United States, that number increases to 1 in 5, and it's no secret that many people don't have access to the care or financial support they need to become a parent.
In this article:
As a previous co-chair of RESOLVE's Advocacy Day, Illume Fertility's Patient Advocate, and a former fertility patient myself, I am passionate about increasing access to fertility care and supporting families of all kinds.
Let's talk about why Advocacy Day is so important to the fertility and family-building communities and how you can get involved - from the comfort of your own home.
RESOLVE: The National Infertility Association holds an annual event called Federal Advocacy Day, where the infertility community comes together to talk to members of U.S. Congress about important issues like increased access to family-building options and financial relief for those who want to grow their family.
RESOLVE’s Advocacy Day is all virtual, and presented in partnership with the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM). Advocacy Day is an interactive, engaging online event that brings together RESOLVE volunteers and champions to make change.
Note: All volunteers receive helpful training and support before meeting virtually with members of U.S. Congress and their staff - so you don't even need previous experience!
If you're new to Advocacy Day, you most likely have quite a few questions swirling around in your head! Let's tackle a few common ones below:
The date for RESOLVE's next Advocacy Day will be May 20, 2025. Learn more and sign up to receive action alerts here.
After you register for Advocacy Day, you will receive a confirmation email from the RESOLVE team with further instructions and helpful information. There will be multiple training calls prior to your meetings, where RESOLVE will answer your questions about what to expect on Advocacy Day, what legislation is currently on the table, and more.
Check out RESOLVE's helpful FAQ section to get answers to these questions and more:
Whether you're brand new to advocacy or a seasoned veteran - we need your voice! Here are five easy ways to get involved and help make change:
[cta1]
Reproductive autonomy means different things to different people. For me, and for the 1 in 5 U.S. citizens like me who are affected by infertility, reproductive autonomy is about having the opportunity to bring children into the world.
Note: After the U.S. Supreme Court ruling overturning Roe v. Wade and 2024 Alabama Supreme Court ruling regarding IVF, reproductive freedom is being stripped away on many levels. Dr. Murdock explains about how these rulings may impact our community.
Maybe you were able to have children on your own. Perhaps you struggled with infertility but were fortunate enough to have great insurance coverage, excellent clinicians and really good luck, and were able to become a parent through some form of fertility treatment.
Maybe adoption was the perfect choice for you to expand your family.
Maybe you could have had children but decided against it.
No matter your personal decisions around family building, everyone deserves the chance to have a family of their own if they so choose. On Advocacy Day, we raise our voices for everyone who has struggled to have the family they dream of.
I am often asked why I'm so passionate about advocacy. While many people (including myself) have personal reasons for wanting to get involved in infertility advocacy, here are five powerful reasons to consider participating:
Keep reading to dive a little deeper!
When you join RESOLVE and ASRM for Advocacy Day, you join a community of people telling our legislators that we are passionate about family-building issues. Here's what we want to convey:
Empowerment is the one word echoed over the years around Advocacy Day. When you take a step forward to tell legislators how vital family-building bills are, you change. I know it has changed me. Empowerment is a word that RESOLVE hears more often than any other.
Advocacy Day provides a space to express frustrations over not being able to have the family you dreamed of on the timeline you expected (or at all).
We carefully craft our stories to ensure the full impact of our experiences are conveyed. Legislators often stay silent throughout our meetings, sometimes ending the session in tears. They also often have lots of questions, and we are able to explain why infertility is a disease that deserves their attention.
Being able to do all of this feels incredibly empowering.
Infertility can make us feel broken. Less than. Damaged. Helpless. All emotions that no one wants to feel. But we have to remember that these feelings are not facts.
One way to counter these feelings is to take action. If you are still trying to grow your family, you are probably taking many actions to achieve that goal. On Advocacy Day, you get to take a different type of action.
Taking action to create lasting change can feel incredibly satisfying. That’s where advocacy comes in. It’s your opportunity to take action in a way that can literally change the world.
You can help change who is able to access fertility treatment and if/when insurance coverage is offered to those struggling with infertility, which are both life-changing!
To put it simply, infertility is not political, it does not discriminate, it affects healthy human beings and it can damage dreams, impair hope and cause faith to falter.
Infertility is a battle that we all can take part in defeating.
The dream of becoming a parent becomes battered, with the possibility of being lost forever. Friendships and other relationships are affected, due to the challenges of being with others who already have children or those who simply don't understand what we're going through.
The emotional pain of feeling unsuccessful at fulfilling the biological instinct to become a parent is intense. How we spend our time and money is affected. Vacations, career advancement, moves and other milestones are deferred as medical appointments, treatment cycles and paying for treatment take precedence.
There is also a loss of reproductive autonomy when we aren't able to depend on our own bodies to function the way we expect them to.
Yes, courageous!
From taking the first step of booking an appointment to finding the strength to ask questions, see clinicians and doctors, go through fertility testing, deal with injections, procedures, anesthesia, hormones, investigating adoption or fostering, making decisions...it all takes a lot of courage.
Every family looks different. Some families grow by having biological children, some grow through fertility treatment, some grow through adoption or fostering, and some find completion as a couple or a single-person family.
Want free, one-on-one support? Email me to connect anytime.
[cta2]
One thing about infertility is that when you’re in the middle of it, it can feel never-ending. Like you'll be stuck there forever. Time both slows down and speeds up, especially if you're worried about your "biological clock" that's ticking away.
One truth about the journey to have a baby is that it eventually does end.
Whether it ends because you have limited insurance coverage, because you've exhausted your medical treatment options that are appropriate or helpful, because of finances, or because you finally have that long-awaited baby...it does end.
Help us make sure that no one has to end their story before they’re ready to. Help us tell our legislators that infertility deserves to be treated as a disease, with appropriate access to fertility care. Because our families and our dreams matter.
Remember: Your voice and story are powerful, and when joined with the voices of others, cannot be ignored. Never underestimate the impact you can make!