North Carolina Couple Credits Kyle Busch's $15,000 IVF Grant as Fund Tops $2 Million After His Death
Updated
Updated · WXII12 Winston-Salem · May 23
North Carolina Couple Credits Kyle Busch's $15,000 IVF Grant as Fund Tops $2 Million After His Death
11 articles · Updated · WXII12 Winston-Salem · May 23
$15,000 from Samantha and Kyle Busch’s Bundle of Joy fund helped Jennifer and Michael Cline pursue IVF after costs put treatment out of reach, the North Carolina couple said after Kyle Busch’s death.
IVF was their only option, Jennifer Cline said, with egg retrieval alone costing about $15,000 to $20,000 before the couple received the grant directly from Samantha Busch during a race.
The Clines are now preparing for their third embryo transfer and said the Busch family’s involvement made Kyle Busch’s loss feel personal, urging the community to support the family with prayers.
Founded in 2015 after the Busches’ own infertility struggles, the Bundle of Joy fund has awarded more than $2 million in grants to families seeking fertility treatment.
Following Kyle Busch’s death, how will his charity adapt to the future of fertility technology and growing demand for aid?
As IVF costs soar, can private charity solve the fertility crisis, or does the healthcare system require a fundamental overhaul?
As personalized IVF advances, are we ready for the profound ethical questions that arise from designing future generations?