There's a law that prohibits the VA from paying for in vitro fertilization because of concerns unused embryos might be discarded.
snip With efforts to change the law stymied by the politics of abortion, Kevin and Lauren got married this weekend and made no secret of their dream.
August 5, 2015 - Many veterans depend on the VA for medical care. But some say that they are being denied a chance to fulfill their dreams because there is one battle wound for which the VA does not offer a solution.After two and a half years in the hospital and 30 surgeries, Kevin Jaye is out of the army but still dealing with the VA.
"Another survey from the Department of Veterans Affairs of my mental health," he says, reading his mail to his fiance. "That will be fun."
He's classified as 100 percent disabled because a roadside bomb in Afghanistan cost him his right leg and severely damaged his left. He's learned to live with that, but there's another disability -- one he's not sure he can talk about on television.
"And then I lost...had injuries to," he stammers before being assured frankness was allowed.
"I lost my left testicle," Jaye said. "The right one was damaged."
The unmentionable wound young men dread the most.
"There goes essentially your manhood," he said. "Now what?"
But he had to tell Lauren Belliotti because he wanted to marry her.
"I was sad for him and then I was nervous for the future," said Belliotti.
Would they be able to have children of their own? read more>>>
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