(Press-News.org) The rise of private equity firms investing in health care facilities across the United States has been exploding in the last decade.
Because of that rapid growth, researchers have been digging into what this could mean for health care and patients in the long term.
In recent years, private equity firms have become more active in the fertility space, where many patients seek care for reproductive issues and pursue in vitro fertilization, or IVF, which costs thousands of dollars, and usually isn’t covered by insurance.
James Dupree, M.D., M.P.H., and his colleagues wanted to explore what these changes could mean for patients with infertility. Dupree is a professor of urology and obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Michigan Medical School, who directs U-M Health’s Male Fertility Preservation Program and studies fertility care.
In their new paper published in JAMA, the team shows that since 2013, expansive growth has been seen in affiliations between fertility clinics and private equity firms.
They also find that over half of IVF cycles in the country in 2023 were done at clinics affiliated with private equity firms.
More about the paper
A federal law requires every fertility clinic to report data about their IVF cycles to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The team used those reports from 2013 to 2022 to examine every IVF clinic in the country, which includes private practices and hospital-based clinics.
They used other databases and online searches to identify which clinics were affiliated with private equity firms.
What they found was pretty dramatic growth. In 2013, only 4% of fertility clinics were affiliated with private equity firms. But since then, the number has exploded.
“As of 2023, we estimate that 32% of IVF clinics were affiliated with private equity firms,” explained Dupree. “And these clinics affiliated with these private equity firms are performing over half of the IVF cycles in the country.”
So what does that mean?
“There’s a lot we don’t know yet. It might be good for patients; it costs a lot of money to modernize IVF laboratory equipment and perform outreach to patients and private equity firms can provide capital to hopefully improve quality and patient care.”
He also explains that in other health care settings outside fertility care, there’s data to suggest quality could decline while costs increase.
“We don’t know yet in the fertility world whether this is a net gain for patients or net loss,” he said.
Dupree emphasizes how private equity-supported fertility care will be a crucial business model to continue examining, especially with the government’s recent interest in making IVF care more accessible to Americans with infertility.
He said, “Given how prevalent the business model is, we need to do more research and understand the benefits and risks — like the quality of care, cost of care, access to care — are they better or are they worse?”
As a top researcher in the area, Dupree and his team will continue his work looking into fertility care across the United States, including how IVF is covered by insurance companies, to help hopefully inform future health policies and help patients in the long run.
The study’s first author, Jesper Ke, M.D., MBA, is a resident physician at the Yale School of Medicine, and graduated from the U-M Medical School and Ross School of Business in 2025. Other authors are U-M medical student Joshua Chen, U-M statistician Elena Chun, M.S., and U-M urology professor Vahakn Shahinian, M.D.
Dupree and Shaninian are members of the U-M Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation, which sponsored the research through a grant from its Policy Sprints program.
Paper cited: “Trends in Private Equity Affiliations with Fertility Clinics in the US,” JAMA, doi:10.1001/jama.2025.24516
Written by Johanna Younghans Baker
END
Examining private equity’s role in fertility care
Researchers find over 50% of IVF cycles are now done at fertility clinics affiliated with private equity firms
2025-12-30
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Current Molecular Pharmacology achieves a landmark: real-time CiteScore advances to 7.2
2025-12-30
Current Molecular Pharmacology (CMP), a peer-reviewed international journal dedicated to publishing cutting-edge advances in cellular and molecular pharmacology, is proud to announce a major achievement: its 2025 real-time CiteScore has advanced to an outstanding 7.2. This milestone reflects the journal's growing impact and commitment to excellence in the field.
CMP focuses on critical areas of modern pharmacology, including the mechanisms of action of novel drugs, advancements in pharmacological technologies (such as high-throughput screening, AI-driven drug discovery, and nanotechnology), and the application of genomics, proteomics, ...
Skeletal muscle epigenetic clocks developed using postmortem tissue from an Asian population
2025-12-30
“This study introduces the skeletal muscle epigenetic clocks in an Asian population using postmortem skeletal muscle tissue.”
BUFFALO, NY — December 30, 2025 — A new research paper was published in Volume 17, Issue 11 of Aging-US on November 26, 2025, titled “Epigenetic aging signatures and age prediction in human skeletal muscle.”
In this study, first author Soo-Bin Yang and corresponding author Hwan Young Lee from Seoul National University College of Medicine investigated ...
Estimating unemployment rates with social media data
2025-12-30
Social media posts about unemployment can predict official jobless claims up to two weeks before government data is released, according to a study. Unemployment can be tough, and people often post about it online. Sam Fraiberger and colleagues developed an artificial intelligence model that identifies unemployment disclosures on social media. Data from 31.5 million Twitter users posting between 2020 and 2022 was used to train a transformer-based classifier called JoblessBERT to detect unemployment-related posts, even those that featured slang or misspellings, ...
Climate policies can backfire by eroding “green” values, study finds
2025-12-30
A popular vision of life after climate action looks like vegetarians riding bikes, city centers without cars, and people foregoing air travel. But a paper published in Nature Sustainability finds that climate policies targeting lifestyle changes (say, urban car bans) actually may weaken people’s green values, thereby undermining support for other needed environmental policies.
“Policies don’t just spur a target behavior. We find that they can change people’s underlying values: leading to unintended negative effects, but also possibly cultivating green values,” says SFI Complexity Postdoctoral ...
Too much screen time too soon? A*STAR study links infant screen exposure to brain changes and teen anxiety
2025-12-30
SINGAPORE — Children exposed to high levels of screen time before age two showed changes in brain development that were linked to slower decision-making and increased anxiety by their teenage years, according to new research by Asst Prof Tan Ai Peng and her team from A*STAR Institute for Human Development and Potential (A*STAR IHDP) and National University of Singapore (NUS) Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, using data from the Growing Up in Singapore Towards healthy Outcomes (GUSTO) cohort.
Published in eBioMedicine, the study tracked the same children over more than a decade, with brain imaging ...
Global psychiatry mourns Professor Dan Stein, visionary who transformed mental health science across Africa and beyond
2025-12-30
NEW YORK, New York, USA, 31 December 2025 — An obituary published today in Genomic Psychiatry pays tribute to Professor Dan Joseph Stein, the internationally acclaimed psychiatrist and neuroscientist who died on 6 December 2025 at age 63 after a brief illness. Professor Stein served as Chair of the Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health at the University of Cape Town, Director of the South African Medical Research Council Unit on Risk & Resilience in Mental Disorders, and Scientific Director of the UCT Neuroscience Institute. His death ...
KIST develops eco-friendly palladium recovery technology to safeguard resource security
2025-12-30
Palladium (Pd) is widely used in various industries and everyday products, including smartphones, semiconductor manufacturing processes, and hydrogen fuel cells. Palladium is an essential metal that acts as an excellent catalyst even in minute quantities, reducing pollutants and enhancing energy efficiency. However, palladium production is concentrated in a few countries, leading to unstable supply. While South Korea generates significant amounts of spent catalysts and electronic waste annually, a lack of eco-friendly and efficient recovery technologies means much is discarded or relies ...
Statins significantly reduce mortality risk for adults with diabetes, regardless of cardiovascular risk
2025-12-29
Embargoed for release until 5:00 p.m. ET on Monday 29 December 2025
Follow @Annalsofim on X, Facebook, Instagram, Bluesky, and LinkedIn
Below please find summaries of new articles that will be published in the next issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. The summaries are not intended to substitute for the full articles as a source of information. This information is under strict embargo and by taking it into possession, media representatives are committing to the terms of the embargo not only on their ...
Brain immune cells may drive more damage in females than males with Alzheimer’s
2025-12-29
More than seven million Americans have Alzheimer’s disease, and two-thirds of them are women, according to the Alzheimer’s Association. The O’Banion Lab at the Del Monte Institute for Neuroscience at the University of Rochester has long been studying this disease and is looking more closely at the differences between male and female brains.
“It is well documented that males and females are diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease at different rates,” said M. Kerry O’Banion, MD, PhD, professor of Neuroscience and Neurology. “But we still do ...
Evidence-based recommendations empower clinicians to manage epilepsy in pregnancy
2025-12-29
PITTSBURGH, Dec. 29, 2025 – For the first time, clinicians have access to a clear, evidence-based roadmap for adjusting antiseizure medication doses during pregnancy and after childbirth.
The strategies, practiced by a group of leading women’s neurology experts in the nationwide landmark Maternal Outcomes and Neurodevelopmental Effects of Antiepileptic Drugs (MONEAD) study, were published today in Neurology. They are expected to inform clinical ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
New study reveals floods are the biggest drivers of plastic pollution in rivers
Novel framework for real-time bedside heart rate variability analysis
Dogs and cats help spread an invasive flatworm species
Long COVID linked to Alzheimer’s disease mechanisms
Study reveals how chills develop and support the body's defense against infection
Half of the world’s coral reefs suffered major bleaching during the 2014–2017 global heatwave
AI stethoscope can help spot ‘silent epidemic’ of heart valve disease earlier than GPs, study suggests
Researchers rebuild microscopic circadian clock that can control genes
Controlled “oxidative spark”: a surprising ally in brain repair
Football-sized fossil creature may have been one of the first land animals to eat its veggies
Study finds mindfulness enables more effective endoscopies in awake patients
Young scientists from across the UK shortlisted for largest unrestricted science prize
Bison hunters abandoned long-used site 1,100 years ago to adapt to changing climate
Parents of children with medical complexity report major challenges with at-home medical devices
The nonlinear Hall effect induced by electrochemical intercalation in MoS2 thin flake devices
Moving beyond money to measure the true value of Earth science information
Engineered moths could replace mice in research into “one of the biggest threats to human health”
Can medical AI lie? Large study maps how LLMs handle health misinformation
The Lancet: People with obesity at 70% higher risk of serious infection with one in ten infectious disease deaths globally potentially linked to obesity, study suggests
Obesity linked to one in 10 infection deaths globally
Legalization of cannabis + retail sales linked to rise in its use and co-use of tobacco
Porpoises ‘buzz’ less when boats are nearby
When heat flows backwards: A neat solution for hydrodynamic heat transport
Firearm injury survivors face long-term health challenges
Columbia Engineering announces new program: Master of Science in Artificial Intelligence
Global collaboration launches streamlined-access to Shank3 cKO research model
Can the digital economy save our lungs and the planet?
Researchers use machine learning to design next generation cooling fluids for electronics and energy systems
Scientists propose new framework to track and manage hidden risks of industrial chemicals across their life cycle
Physicians are not providers: New ACP paper says names in health care have ethical significance
[Press-News.org] Examining private equity’s role in fertility careResearchers find over 50% of IVF cycles are now done at fertility clinics affiliated with private equity firms