Yeah, it's a change they made so all people are equally covered when it comes to fertility treatments. Now a single person wanting in vitro, when going by WHO standards, should be on equal footing with married couples when it comes to treatment and coverage.
I know I am delving too deep with this but just for fun, what is the measurement for "inability"? What attempts have to be made, through what outlets i.e. singles groups, online dating, speed dating etc and how frequently? And who monitors it? (I am just saying this for fun and for arguments sake. I am completely aware and respect it's purpose. So before anyone gets all crazy lol)
If you consider the reasons why they do this :
"Yeah, it's a change they made so all people are equally covered when it comes to fertility treatments. Now a single person wanting in vitro, when going by WHO standards, should be on equal footing with married couples when it comes to treatment and coverage." (according to dancadamorte's comment), its a pretty reasonable thing. Maybe the wording isn't great, but the motive is ok.
I'm just saying, this week parents deserve to be treated first if they're trying to have a child for their family. It isn't really a good idea to have a child single. AND BEFORE ANYONE LOSES THEIR SHIT I'm not bashing single parents. Most single parents don't have their child intending on being single. I'm more so saying you shouldn't want to be a single parent on purpose just for the child's sake.
"Yeah, it's a change they made so all people are equally covered when it comes to fertility treatments. Now a single person wanting in vitro, when going by WHO standards, should be on equal footing with married couples when it comes to treatment and coverage." (according to dancadamorte's comment), its a pretty reasonable thing. Maybe the wording isn't great, but the motive is ok.