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A New Benefit for Vets: Fertility Treatments

Jeff Lynch survived catastrophic injuries from his two deployments to Iraq, but they left him unable to have children naturally.
Brian Batista
/
American Homefront
Jeff Lynch survived catastrophic injuries from his two deployments to Iraq, but they left him unable to have children naturally.

Thousands of veterans have suffered combat injures that left them infertile. For the first time, the VA will pay for treatments to help them have children.

When his convoy was attacked with an improvised explosive device in Iraq in 2007, Army sergeant Jeff Lynch was seriously wounded. He suffered a traumatic brain injury, was hospitalized for months, and underwent more than a hundred surgeries.

His injuries also left him unable to father children.

"At that time, you're not thinking of kids," Lynch said. "You're worried about if you're going to survive."

But after Lynch left the military, he and his wife Christy decided they wanted a family. They had one child, but a second baby died shortly after birth. Now, the lingering effects of his injuries - and his medications - have left them unable to have more children naturally.

The Lynches explored in vitro fertilization, but the procedure's $15,000 price tag was daunting.

"It was something we weren't comfortable putting all of that money into without having a guaranteed outcome,” Christy said.

Veterans advocates estimate that as many as 2000 former service members are possible candidates for IVF because of military related fertility problems.  But the cost is out of reach for many wounded vets, and in 1992, Congress banned the Department of Veterans Affairs from paying for it under veterans benefits.

That ban has now been lifted under legislation passed in October. 

"We all say when someone serves their country, we are there for them when they come home," said Washington Democratic Senator Patty Murray, who had fought the ban since 2012.  "Certainly allowing them to fulfill their dream of having a family ought to be part of what's there for them when they return."

Murray said it was difficult to remove the ban because of resistance from conservative members of Congress.

"Individual lawmakers were making a decision having to do with a woman's right to choose, not about making sure these men and women could fulfill their dream through IVF," she said.

Christy Lynch lobbied Congress to lift the VA ban on paying for veterans' fertility treatments.
Credit Brian Batista / American Homefront
/
American Homefront
Christy Lynch lobbied Congress to lift the VA ban on paying for veterans' fertility treatments.

Christy and Jeff Lynch were among several couples who lobbied lawmakers for the bill. They encountered the same concerns.

"One of the questions we were asked was, 'What do you do with your leftover embryos?'" Christy said.  "The response that we had was it's none of your business what we choose to do with our leftover embryos. Those are ours."

The new law actually came too late to help the Lynches. By the time it passed, they had already undergone IVF through a doctor who treats wounded vets for a reduced fee.

And now they're expecting twins.

The Lynches' small house in Apex, N.C. is  already crowded with toys that belong to their 7-year-old daughter CateLyn, and the tight space is about to get tighter.

But Jeff Lynch says they'll make it work for now. 

"I just want her and the two babies to come out healthy. That's all I want," Jeff said.

And Christy wants all wounded veterans to have the option of using IVF under their VA benefits. The new law is only temporary. It expires in two years.  And Christy plans to keep fighting to make it permanent.

"Jeff has a friend who is almost like a brother to him who is a paraplegic," Christy said. "We didn't want him and his future wife to have to fight this battle."

Copyright 2020 North Carolina Public Radio – WUNC. To see more, visit .

Patricia Murphy is an award-winning reporter at KUOW Public Radio in Seattle focusing on military affairs, veterans issues and criminal justice. She began her career at WBUR Boston in 1994 and has worked at KUOW since 2000.
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