What is Fertility Advocacy?
What Do Fertility Advocates Do?
- Reduce the stigma surrounding infertility and IVF
- Improve access to fertility treatments
- Increase awareness of the emotional impact of infertility
- Promote inclusive fertility care for all family-building journeys
- Encourage better workplace support for those undergoing treatment
- Advocate for accessible mental health services throughout the fertility journey
Why Fertility Advocacy Matters
- shame
- embarrassment
- emotional exhaustion
- anxiety
- social isolation
Different Types of Fertility Advocacy
1. Patient Advocacy
Patient advocacy empowers individuals to make informed decisions throughout their fertility journey. This includes understanding treatment options, asking questions, accessing resources, and finding trusted healthcare providers.
2. Mental Health Advocacy
Infertility can take a significant emotional toll. Mental health advocacy promotes access to therapy, coping strategies, and emotional support, recognizing that caring for your mental wellbeing is just as important as medical treatment.
3. Workplace Advocacy
Fertility treatments often require frequent appointments and flexibility. Advocacy encourages employers to offer supportive policies, such as flexible scheduling, fertility benefits, and a compassionate workplace culture.
4. Public Education
Sharing accurate information through blogs, social media, workshops, and community events helps reduce stigma and encourages more open conversations about infertility.
5. Healthcare Advocacy
Healthcare advocacy focuses on improving access to fertility care by promoting equitable treatment, integrated mental health services, inclusive care, and greater access to publicly funded fertility services.
Therapists Role in Fertility Advocacy
As therapists, fertility advocacy might look like:
- educating people about the emotional impact of infertility
- completing additional trainings
- collaborating with other healthcare professionals including dietitians, naturopathic doctors, family physicians
- developing workbooks and resources for IVF patients
- supporting clients with advocating for themselves
- speaking on podcasts
- participating in awareness campaigns and events like infertility awareness month
How You Can Become a Fertility Advocate
Anyone can become a fertility advocate through
- listening without judgement
- avoiding insensitive comments and unsolicited advice
- supporting loved ones through difficult milestones
- speaking openly about infertility to reduce the stigma
- sharing accurate information