A South Carolina Senate proposal would define an unborn child as a human being from conception and expand civil and criminal tools around abortion. Medical and legal groups warn the language could reach assisted reproduction, including IVF, even as supporters say it targets abortion providers and those who aid abortions.
South Carolina lawmakers are weighing the Unborn Child Protection Act (S.323), which would redefine terms in state law and overhaul enforcement of abortion restrictions.
What the bill does
- Defines “unborn child” as a “human being from conception until live birth,” adds a definition of “human embryo,” and revises related terms such as “pregnant” and “conception,” according to the bill text on the South Carolina Legislature’s website. It also deletes existing rape, incest, and fatal-fetal-anomaly exceptions, restructures enforcement, and creates new civil remedies. The bill adds a wrongful-death cause of action “on behalf of an aborted unborn child” that can be brought by the patient, the putative father, or the parents/guardians of a pregnant minor if the patient does not sue. It further creates civil liability for aiding and abetting prohibited abortions and restricts transporting minors out of state to obtain an abortion, while defining and limiting the distribution of “abortifacients.”
- As written in the most recent posted version (February 2025), the bill states that “a pregnant woman on whom an abortion is performed or induced in violation of this article may not be criminally prosecuted.” However, reporting on an October 1, 2025, Senate subcommittee hearing said a working version discussed that day “would allow women to be prosecuted and sued,” reflecting active debate over whether to remove that shield. The official text on the Legislature’s website still contains the non-prosecution clause, while critics and some supporters are pressing to change it.
Why IVF providers are watching
- Although S.323 focuses on abortion, its definition of an unborn child “from conception,” along with the added definition of a “human embryo,” has drawn concern from fertility specialists about potential spillover into in vitro fertilization. The American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) urged senators to defeat what it called an “extreme personhood ban,” arguing the framework risks chilling routine embryo creation, testing, storage, and disposition. Bill sponsor Sen. Richard Cash has said the measure is aimed at abortion and does not mention IVF; he and allies contend it would not bar emergency contraception or standard IVF practices. Physicians and lawyers who testified warned, however, that overlapping definitions and liability provisions could still deter care in practice.
A preview from Alabama
- In February 2024, the Alabama Supreme Court held that frozen embryos destroyed at a fertility clinic could be treated as “children” under the state’s wrongful-death statute, describing them as “extrauterine” children kept alive in a “cryogenic nursery.” Clinics in Alabama paused parts of IVF care until lawmakers passed a limited immunity law; even then, providers and advocates said unresolved legal risks remained. Critics of S.323 say its wrongful-death provisions could invite similar litigation dynamics in South Carolina.
The personhood push and penalties
- The bill would expand civil avenues to enforce abortion restrictions, including private lawsuits by the father or by a pregnant minor’s parents if the patient does not sue. It would also create racketeering-style liability around “prohibited abortion activity” and stiffen penalties for those who provide, facilitate, or advertise information about obtaining abortions. Anti-abortion activists who testified split over whether to prosecute patients directly. Mark Corral, who leads Equal Protection South Carolina, told senators: “Failing to treat the murder of preborn children as homicide in the same way that we treat homicide of born persons violates God’s law, the U.S. and state constitutions.” Other long-standing anti-abortion groups in the state opposed criminalizing patients while supporting tighter restrictions on providers.
National and state context
- The South Carolina Supreme Court in 2025 upheld the state’s 2023 six‑week ban based on detection of fetal cardiac activity. S.323 goes further by redefining key terms and reducing exceptions. Pregnancy Justice, a legal advocacy group, notes South Carolina’s long record of pregnancy-related prosecutions, including hospital‑initiated law enforcement referrals dating to the late 1980s and 1990s.
- Beyond South Carolina, IVF has become a national flashpoint. During the 2024 campaign, Donald Trump pledged to make IVF free or mandate broad coverage. As president, he signed a February 2025 executive order directing officials to find ways to expand IVF access and lower costs, but it did not fund treatment. In October 2025, the administration announced policy steps that did not include new federal funding or coverage mandates, and the campaign‑style pledge effectively fizzled.
What’s next
- S.323 remains in the Senate Medical Affairs Committee. Until lawmakers finalize text, two critical questions will keep driving the debate: whether the Legislature will maintain or remove the bill’s current bar on prosecuting pregnant patients, and how broadly courts could read the bill’s personhood‑style definitions if it becomes law.
Note: This article draws on the official bill text and contemporaneous reporting. Where versions or interpretations differ, those differences are noted explicitly.