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September 25, 2000
Contact: Jennifer Day, (313)
577-1058, jday@med.wayne.edu
Money-back
guarantee offered to
couples
who
undergo in vitro fertilization
Couples paying high
costs for fertility treatments can now choose special financing options like a
home equity loan, a fixed-rate care package, or a money-back guarantee that
provides a refund if they can’t have a baby. These and other innovative
payment plans are available through six Wayne State University (WSU) doctors who
participate in the Advanced Reproductive Care network. ARC, which was featured
in a Sept. 8 Wall Street Journal article, offers practical payment plans
for a very specific product: a healthy child.
Michael Diamond, MD, who
serves on the board of directors for ARC and is a reproductive endocrinologist
at Wayne State, says the company will help build families for people who
wouldn’t otherwise absorb the financial risk associated with fertility
treatment. ARC contracts with insurers and corporations to help patients cover
the costs associated with assisted reproduction.
Although the cost of in vitro fertilization can soar
up to $40,000, Dr. Diamond says the typical cost for once cycle of treatment is
approximately $12,000 to $13,000. Advanced Reproductive Care physicians offers
package plans and innovative ways to manage this financial burden.
“In vitro fertilization is not covered by insurance
in most states, so couples take a big risk when they put all their hopes and
money into conceiving a baby. If they are unsuccessful, they are left with
nothing. Through ARC, having children becomes a much more feasible option,”
said Dr. Diamond.
Nine doctors in Michigan are currently members of
this company, and there are more than 200 members nationwide. The company is
primarily run by its member physicians who comprise 72 percent of the ownership
and management. Dr. Diamond says he and his colleagues were frustrated that so
many patients had to wait many years, often until they were well into their 30s
and 40s, to save up enough money for treatment, further reducing their chance of
a successful pregnancy.
For more information on ARC, visit the website at www.arcfertility.com.
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