Who stands to lose from "fertility awareness" education?
As America grapples with a historic decline in birth rates, a growing emphasis on fertility awareness is beginning to shift public conversation — and potentially, longstanding industry interests. Among the proposals gaining traction are government-funded programs to teach women how to track their ovulation and better understand their natural fertility cycles.
Supporters argue these efforts could empower women with knowledge often overshadowed by pharmaceutical solutions, such as hormonal birth control and IVF treatments. But the movement is raising eyebrows among critics who warn that greater awareness could disrupt a multibillion-dollar fertility and contraception market — one long dominated by Big Pharma.