WASHINGTON 鈥 Surrounded by hot pink lights and cherry blossom pink drapes on a ballroom stage, family doctor Marguerite Duane offered a seemingly simple solution to infertility: Doctors should have conversations with young girls about whether they want to have children one day.
鈥淚 have these conversations with children starting at 8, 10, 12 years old: What do you want to be when you grow up?鈥 Duane said. If you鈥檙e a child who wants to be a doctor, for instance, 鈥渢here are things you need to put in place. If you hope to have children one day, there are things that you need to consider and have the conversation early.鈥
The proposal from Duane, a specialist in who is affiliated with the anti-abortion Charlotte Lozier Institute, got a warm reception from the audience gathered for the Trump administration鈥檚 inaugural .
The three-day event hosted by the Department of Health and Human Services last week was designed to 鈥渆xplore breakthroughs in research, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of health conditions that affect women across the lifespan.鈥 Government officials hosted an eclectic mix of wealthy philanthropists, alternative medicine influencers, health tech executives, and medical researchers to discuss a wide range of issues, from Lyme disease to gut health.
Seeking to reach women at a moment when President Donald Trump鈥檚 support is slipping among a key voting bloc, the Make America Healthy Again movement, the administration-sponsored event elevated perspectives outside conventional standards of medical care and counter to many women鈥檚 health choices.
For example, during a 40-minute panel hosted by Alexis Joel, the wife of musician Billy Joel, several doctors raised concerns about how frequently hormonal birth control is used to treat women鈥檚 health symptoms. Two female physicians on the panel said they were uncomfortable with the idea of using birth control pills for their own treatment, noting that their 鈥渧alues鈥 or 鈥渃ultural perspective鈥 did not align with use of the medication.
Nearly a third of U.S. women ages 18 to 49 report having used birth control pills in the previous 12 months, according to a . In addition to their use as a contraceptive, the pills are prescribed for , including preventing anemia from heavy periods and treating uterine fibroids.
Joel, who has about her experience with endometriosis, brought her own doctor, Tamer Seckin, to discuss the common, painful condition, in which thick tissue develops outside of the uterus. Seckin said women鈥檚 concerns about menstrual pain are often dismissed by doctors, leading to missed diagnoses.
Asima Ahmad, a doctor who specializes in fertility and co-founded Carrot, a company that offers job-based fertility benefits, offered another explanation for why the disease is overlooked.
鈥淎s providers, we should learn how to treat it, rather than covering it up with birth control pills or progesterone,鈥 she said.
Hormonal birth control pills, which help slow the growth of new tissue, are for treating endometriosis, according to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
Andrea Salcedo, a California OB-GYN on the panel who said she has endometriosis as well, said she declined birth control as a treatment. She noted her decision aligned with her 鈥渧alues,鈥 in particular her desire to have more children.
鈥淚s this all that we can do?鈥 Salcedo said of being offered birth control.
Salcedo said she prescribes alternative treatments to her patients because she believes the root cause of infertility is directly related to gut health. Cod liver oil and vitamin A top her list, she said.
whether there is an association between vitamin deficiencies and endometriosis. Taking too much vitamin A can cause health problems, including if taken while pregnant.
Those supplements have been touted by HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 鈥 including, falsely, as a treatment for measles during an outbreak in Texas last year.
About a quarter of U.S. adults wrongly believe vitamin A can prevent measles infections, according to a .
The panel also coalesced around the idea that a lack of knowledge is the root problem: Girls do not receive enough education on how to become pregnant or identify the warning signs of infertility, the doctors suggested.
Education has become too hyperfocused on preventing pregnancy, Ahmad said.
鈥淚 was in junior high, and I was learning about trying not to get pregnant, and I was scared that if I sit in a room with a guy alone, I will,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey put all of this fear into it, but family planning isn鈥檛 just about preventing pregnancy. It鈥檚 about learning about how to build your family.鈥
[Correction: This article was updated at 3 p.m. ET on March 19, 2026, to reflect that Marguerite Duane did not say during the panel that she was uncomfortable with the use of birth control pills.]