
"Meet Baby Olivia" is a video of an animated fetus in disembodied womb. If signed, a proposed law could make it required viewing in Iowa. (Screenshot taken from Meet Baby Olivia)
Iowa lawmakers have passed a bill that will make students watch a medically inaccurate video on fetal development.
A pregnancy education bill, Senate File 175 (SF175), has passed both houses of the Iowa Legislature and is awaiting Gov. Kim Reynolds’ signature.
If signed, it will require students in grades 5-12 to view a fetal development video as part of their human growth and development instruction. The law further requires that the human growth and development curricula include:
- Instruction referring to “human development” instead of “fetal development,” inside the “womb” instead of “uterus,” and
- A high-quality rendering, animation, or image that “depicts the humanity of the unborn child.”
The law additionally prohibits using any educational materials created by medical institutions like the Mayo Clinic, Johns Hopkins University, and the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, along with organizations like Planned Parenthood, because they perform or refer for abortions when medically necessary.
“Iowa’s youth are not political pawns, yet here we are once again with state lawmakers inserting themselves into the classroom by requiring even our youngest children to watch scientifically false videos about fetal development,” said Mazie Stilwell, Director of Public Affairs for Planned Parenthood Advocates of Iowa, in a statement.
While the bill does not name a specific video, it’s modeled after a video titled “Meet Baby Olivia,” which was produced by an anti-abortion group. That video misrepresents gestational age, makes false claims about viability, and uses narration that emotionally manipulates viewers—such as characterising fetal movement as “playing.”
“It is despicable and shameless,” Stilwell said. “Our students deserve to be taught curriculum bound in facts, so they are equipped with the necessary tools to make informed decisions about their lives and futures.”
If Reynolds signs the bill into law, the new curriculum standards would be implemented starting July 1, 2025.
Facing cancer in Iowa: Patients share their stories
Cancer in Iowa isn’t just about treatment—it’s about surviving the system, asking why it happened, and living with the aftermath. Five Iowans share...
The future of cancer research in Iowa is uncertain—and lives are on the line
Iowa cancer patients are desperate for better screenings, treatments, and cures. Researchers are desperate to find them. So what's the holdup?...
OPINION: Republican Congress members from Iowan have abandoned their constituents
Despite overwhelming public outcry, Republicans in Congress passed their Big, Ugly Bill, which includes the largest cuts to health care in history....
Arizona Sen. Ruben Gallego visits Iowa State Fair
Gallego is talking about Medicaid cuts with Iowans, potentially in an effort to boost his stature among national Democrats. US Sen. Ruben Gallego of...
How pesticides help fuel Iowa’s cancer crisis
A version of this story first appeared in the Aug. 5 edition of the Iowa Starting Line newsletter. Subscribe to our newsletter to get an exclusive...
Iowa hospitals brace for impact as federal Medicaid cuts loom
Federal Medicaid cuts are expected to strip health care from 86,000 Iowans over the next ten years. One rural hospital administrator warns the...



