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GMJ News > GMJ Briefs > US States Mandate Surveillance of Fertility Clinics—Privacy and Access at Risk
Health PolicyPolicy & SystemsQuality & Safety

US States Mandate Surveillance of Fertility Clinics—Privacy and Access at Risk

GMJ
Last updated: 06/07/2026 01:59
By
Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze
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4 min read|887 words
✓ Editorially Reviewed by Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD — GMJ News Desk

A growing number of US states are implementing mandatory surveillance systems for assisted reproductive technology (ART) clinics, raising concerns about patient privacy, data security, and equitable access to fertility care. The New England Journal of Medicine warns that state-level regulatory mandates lack standardized safeguards and may disproportionately affect vulnerable populations seeking fertility treatment.

Key takeaways

  • Multiple US states have introduced or expanded mandatory surveillance requirements for ART clinics, creating fragmented regulatory frameworks
  • Lack of standardized data protection protocols raises privacy concerns for patients undergoing fertility treatment
  • Surveillance mandates may increase clinic operational costs and limit access to care, particularly in underserved regions
  • Experts call for federal oversight to establish uniform privacy and safety standards across state systems

The shift toward state-mandated surveillance reflects growing regulatory interest in fertility care oversight. However, the NEJM perspective emphasizes that without coordinated federal guidance, these fragmented state-level systems risk creating barriers to care while failing to establish adequate patient protections.

Fragmented
Multiple states implementing uncoordinated ART surveillance mandates without standardized privacy frameworks, according to New England Journal of Medicine analysis

State-Level ART Surveillance Landscape

Regulatory approaches across US jurisdictions lacking federal coordination

Mandatory reporting mandates
Growing
States with privacy safeguards
Limited
Standardized data protocols

Minimal

Source: New England Journal of Medicine, 2025 | Georgian Medical Journal News

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A Patchwork of State Requirements Without Federal Safeguards

State governments increasingly view ART surveillance as a public health priority, yet regulation remains inconsistent across jurisdictions. The NEJM analysis documents how different states impose varying data collection, reporting, and storage requirements on fertility clinics, creating compliance burdens without establishing uniform privacy protections.

These mandates typically require clinics to report patient demographics, treatment outcomes, and embryo disposition data to state health authorities. However, the absence of federal oversight means that data handling practices, encryption standards, and breach notification procedures differ significantly between jurisdictions. Quality & Safety concerns mount when sensitive reproductive health information lacks standardized protection protocols.

Privacy Risks and Patient Vulnerability

Patients pursuing fertility treatment face heightened exposure as state surveillance systems proliferate without adequate safeguards. The NEJM perspective highlights that reproductive health data—particularly information about embryo disposition and genetic testing—is highly sensitive and subject to potential misuse if captured by state systems lacking robust security architecture.

Data breaches involving state health databases have precedent in recent years, raising legitimate concerns about whether ART surveillance systems will meet comparable security standards. Additionally, state data collection may expose patients to discrimination or surveillance by other state agencies, creating chilling effects on access to care. These concerns disproportionately affect low-income patients and those in politically hostile jurisdictions, potentially widening health equity gaps in fertility care access.

State-level ART surveillance mandates lack standardized privacy safeguards, creating fragmented regulatory systems that may compromise patient confidentiality while failing to ensure equitable access to fertility treatment.

— New England Journal of Medicine Policy Analysis, 2025

Clinical and Economic Barriers to Care

Implementation costs associated with surveillance compliance may force smaller fertility clinics to close or consolidate, reducing access in rural and underserved regions. The NEJM report warns that fragmented state requirements increase administrative overhead for clinics, forcing them to invest in multiple compliance systems rather than expanding clinical capacity or reducing patient costs.

Clinicians also report uncertainty about their obligations under varying state mandates, complicating informed consent discussions with patients. This regulatory ambiguity may delay treatment decisions and create barriers for patients seeking care across state lines. Federal health policy coordination is essential to prevent market consolidation that restricts fertility care access.

What this means

For patients: Increased privacy risks as state surveillance systems capture sensitive reproductive health data without standardized protections; potential discrimination or denial of care if state data is shared with other agencies.
For clinicians: Growing compliance burdens from fragmented state requirements; need for clear guidance on data handling and informed consent obligations; potential operational and financial strain.
For policymakers: Urgent need for federal oversight establishing uniform privacy, security, and equity standards for ART surveillance; risk that state-level mandates create market barriers and access inequities without clinical benefit.

Frequently asked questions

Why are US states implementing ART surveillance mandates?

States cite public health monitoring, outcome tracking, and regulatory accountability as justifications. However, the NEJM analysis notes that existing federal frameworks through the CDC already collect ART outcome data, suggesting redundancy and regulatory overlap without clear added public health benefit.

What data do state surveillance systems collect?

State mandates typically require clinics to report patient demographics, treatment cycles, outcomes (live birth rates, pregnancy loss), embryo disposition, and sometimes genetic testing results. The NEJM perspective identifies this reproductive health information as highly sensitive and subject to secondary use risks if stored insecurely.

How can patients protect their privacy under state surveillance mandates?

Options are limited. Patients should ask clinics about their data security practices, state privacy protections, and breach notification procedures. The NEJM report advocates for federal privacy legislation comparable to HIPAA standards to provide uniform protections nationwide, rather than relying on inconsistent state-level safeguards.

Federal action is needed urgently. As surveillance mandates spread across states without coordinated safeguards, the risk of privacy breaches, discriminatory use of reproductive health data, and restricted access to fertility care will intensify. Policymakers must establish national ART privacy standards, centralize oversight, and ensure that surveillance systems enhance public health without compromising patient autonomy or care equity.

Source: Mandated State-Level Surveillance of Assisted Reproductive Technology—An Emerging Threat in the United States, New England Journal of Medicine, 2025

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TAGGED:assisted reproductive technologyfertility care accesshealth policypatient privacystate surveillance
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ByProf. Giorgi Pkhakadze
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Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD, is Editor-in-Chief of the Georgian Medical Journal and Chair of the Public Health Institute of Georgia (PHIG). He is Professor and Head of the Department of Social and Behavioural Sciences at David Tvildiani Medical University, and Secretary/Treasurer of the UEMS Section of Public Health. ORCID: 0000-0001-7609-4515.

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