Donation of Embryos & the Complex Family Tree

Embryo donation & family trees- I found an interesting article today that I thought might provoke some thoughts in both the industry and by those considering this option.  I have included the family tree diagram, which was very interesting and provocative; however, at the same time I felt that shows how diverse families are and how these individuals came together to create several beautiful families - without the children losing their sense of identity.  Let me know your thoughts. 

"Last winter, McLaughlin and her husband, Pat, were given the twins' embryos from a couple in California who had successfully birthed a son. With two children already, their family was complete.

But the California couple never anticipated that four frozen embryos would remain — scant specks in glass pipettes, each about a hundred cells in all and visible only to a microscope.

The McLaughlins are among at least 260 families nationwide each year who successfully have babies after embryo donation, sometimes called embryo adoption.

In the process, the couple have plunged headlong into the dicey ethical, religious and medical debate over the creation and fate of frozen embryos.

It's a debate that Jen McLaughlin, who is Catholic, has tackled with total certainty, grounded in a belief that the embryos are moral equivalents of children.

.....So much so that McLaughlin and the donors are pushing the bounds of a simmering ethical debate on embryo donation even further by rethinking what "family" really means and just how far their children's genetic bonds should go.

Embryo donation sometimes is an anonymous process, with donors and recipients engaging in a cloaked transaction through fertility labs that severs the likelihood of a future child's linking to a genetic past.

But these two couples insisted on an open process so the genetically related children — even the children who still may be born from the two remaining frozen embryos — would stay connected. They felt their children had a right to know their genetic heritage, no matter if their full and half siblings are raised by different parents in different circumstances and most did not come from the same womb."


The story continues, "Social scientists also aren't sure what may come of this. While research suggests open adoption is healthy in traditional circumstances, there is no research on how embryo adopted children may fare in open arrangements. And some worry that parents are imposing sibling relationships on the children without first giving them a choice.

That concern is shared even by some conservative groups that encourage adopting embryos but condemn the technology that made them.

"My concern always in these cases is the adults who are creating all of these confusing relationships, and the way they do it fairly nonchalantly," said Barbara Quigley, executive director of the Center for Bioethics and Culture Missouri.

McLaughlin says it's all very simple when you look into the sleeping faces of her twins.

"People are going to look at their photos and agree this is the right thing to do," she said.

All the studies in the world also aren't going to change the embryo donor's convictions about open adoption and donation.

"I think that most people who are researchers have never been adopted," she said. "If they haven't had that experience, they couldn't possibly know what it was like."

So, with tiny baby steps, everyone is moving ahead in this most modern of families, linked genetically and contractually, potentially for a lifetime."

Friday Legal Updates™- Surrogacy/Adoption Scam, Dr. Phil, and IVF/Embryo Adoption Law Updates

Surrogacy,Embryo Donation & Dr. Phil - well, it has been a slow week for news, but again the legislation that is being considered in Tennessee and Oklahoma should cause us all to pause - patients and industry professionals alike.  TGIF!

Chicago - A Federal Appeals Court has upheld the conviction (rightly so) of a woman who scammed would-be parents by posing as a pregnant woman seeking to place her baby for adoption.  She also responded to ads placed by people looking for surrogate mothers with the false claim that she was already pregnant and was planning to give the baby up for adoption.  Beware and be careful out there.  

Dr. Phil - More on the Michigan Surrogacy Debacle - Should a mental illness prevent a woman from being a mother? Shelly made headlines when she agreed to be a surrogate for Amy and Scott, but later reclaimed the babies when she says she discovered that Amy had a mental disorder. It’s an emotional Dr. Phil you don’t want to miss! 

Oklahoma - The state is considering an embryo adoption law similar to Georgia.  As we know this is disasterous as it increased costs to the Intended Parents.  Take action!

Tennessee - This state is also following Georgia with bills on both the Senate and House Floors.  However, the House Bill does not make an adoption petition required, and it does have some good points, such as the maintenance of records for 21 years and the right of the child to obtain information at the age of 18 years.  It does require a written contract.  This bill is much easier to stomach, and actually would do alot of the things that are needed in this industry, including maintenance of records and release of information at the age of majority. 

Italy - The Italian Court has modified the legislation on Assisted Reproduction by finding the previous legislation regarding the protection of all embryos to be unconstitutional.  The future of this is unknown, as it appears that the Parliment will now need to step in, which is unlikely. 

Another great place to watch for legislative updates and where to find a place to help join the fight is Resolve - Take Action! 

 

 

Women & Their Fertility - The Clock is Ticking...

Women, Their Bioloigical Clock, and Their Eggs - For women who are contemplating how to balance family and career, there is an important study out of the University of St. Andrews and Edinburgh University in Scotland.  They found that women have lost 90 percent of their eggs by the time they are 30 years old, and only have about 3 percent remaining by the time they are 40.  Well, what does that mean to you?  That means that you need to be proactive in your decisions that you make now, as it may affect your ability to have your own genetic chilldren in the future. 

In fact, the article noted as follows:

"You can't reverse the biological clock, but Savard said there are certain factors within your control that have an impact upon your fertility.
For example, stopping smoking, keeping your weight down and controlling stress can all slow the loss of fertility.
Women who have more pregnancies are fertile for longer, and some women are born with more eggs than others, she said. The more eggs with which a woman is born, the longer she will be fertile and more time she will have until the onset of menopause."

Women need to educate themselves, which is why the Manicures and Martinis series by the American Fertility Association is so important. 

Legal Puzzle of Parentage? New York Times finally gets it right on this one.....

Surrogacy & Egg Donation & the Legal Puzzle Regarding Parentage - I am pleased to see that someone at the New York Times finally posted something positive on surrogacy - a concept to say the least regarding how these cases should be handled by the courts.  In fact, the writer is focusing on the science that is now evolving whereby the defective DNA of one female is removed and replaced with another female's DNA - effectively causing there to be more than two genetic parents.  However, the writer elaborates with some common sense information that is both timely and responsible.

"When technology transforms a legal field — as the Internet is doing now for privacy, and digital music and video are doing for copyright — judges and legal thinkers have to decide what are the important values.

Parenthood cannot be reduced to a formula, but the law should move toward a greater recognition that the intent of the people involved is more important than the genes. That would provide useful guidance for courts to think about fractional parents — especially if the day comes when three or more people want to combine their DNA to create a baby."

Nice job and good advice for the courts and legislatures alike!

German Twins Born via Surrogacy in India Denied Visas

India Surrogacy & German Twins - the twins born to a surrogate in India approximately two years ago have hit another legal hurdle.   The Indian courts had requested that the German government grant the children temporary visas so that the couple can finally go home from India with their children.  However, news reports now state that Germany has rejected the parents' bid for the visas.  The German government stated that their only real option was to adopt the twins.  A cautionary tale for all when thinking about reproductive tourism.

The twins of a German couple born to an Indian surrogate mother may have a chance to go to Germany – if the couple decides to adopt them. The Supreme Court asked the couple if they would consider adopting the two-year-olds as Germany does not recognise surrogate motherhood.

The apex court Monday asked Jan Balaaz and his wife if they would consider adopting the children after Solicitor General Gopal Subramanium told the court that Germany does not recognise surrogate motherhood, but allows international adoption of children by its citizens.

Subramanium told the bench of Justice G.S. Singhvi and Justice Asok Ganguly that in the given scenario, the German couple may consider adopting the twins.

He gave the information during hearing of a lawsuit by the government challenging the Gujarat High Court ruling which had directed the government to give Indian passport to the twins born to Jan Balaaz and his wife through a surrogate Indian mother.

The apex court has asked the couple to take their decision and apprise it within two days.

The apex court on Jan 4 asked the central government to try to settle the tangled issue of citizenship of the twins through diplomatic channels. The children were born to Gujarati surrogate mother Marthaben.

The government is opposed to grant an Indian passport to the twins on the ground that it would mean granting them Indian citizenship.

The Gujarat High Court in its order on a lawsuit by the German couple ordered passports for the twins born in January 2008.

The couple came to India in December 2006 in search of a surrogate mother and entered into an agreement with Marthaben, according to which she lost her right over the child after delivery.

On the plea of the German couple last month, the apex court asked the government to provide travel documents to the twins within 48 hours, while asking them to approach the German embassy for visa to the twins.

Friday Legal Updates™ - Abortion Foes & Egg Donation, NJ Gay Bill, & Prop. 8, Marriage & Infertility

First, let's start out with a moment of silence for all of the people of Haiti.  Please make donations via www.whitehouse.gov.

TGIF!  Now, let's start out with our updates:

1.New York - Abortion foes are challenging the payment of $10K to egg donors for use in research by the NY Stem Cell Board.  Interestingly enough, no donor has donated through this program.  The Board argues that the case lacks merit; however, the group believes that the offer of money for the donation of eggs exploits women.  What do you think?  The Board also argues as follows:

"There is no principled reason to distinguish between donation of oocytes for reproductive purposes and research purposes when determining the ethicality of reimbursement," the board wrote. "The risks associated with donating oocytes to stem cell research are no greater than those associated with reproductive donations. Moreover, donating oocytes to stem cell research arguably confers a greater benefit to society than does oocyte donation for private reproductive use."
The group, Rochester-based Feminists Choosing Life New York State, on the other hand think that
"It's going to entice young, economically vulnerable women -- single mothers, college students with loans, unemployed women, immigrants."
2. New Jersey - The State Senate has defeated a bill to legalize gay marriage in the state.  The vote was 20-14, and the new governor threatened to veto regardless.  At least New Jersey does offer civil unions for gay couples.  But, is that enough?
3. California - Should Infertility Be a Valid Reason for Marriage License Denial?  In the defense of Prop 8 by their lead counsel, Charles Cooper, they have argued as follows:

The AFP reports Charles Cooper, an attorney for Proposition 8’s campaign committee, Protect Marriage, has said during the trial “the purpose of the institution of marriage, the central purpose, is to promote procreation and to channel naturally procreative sexual activity between men and women in stable enduring unions.”

However, opponents of Prop 8 have a novel argument of their own:

Congratulations Mr. Cooper,  in the name of all that is holy, you’ve just stated the case for denying infertile men or women a marriage license. Looks like it’s time to shut down the uber Christian Snowflakes embryo adoption project.

Largely backed by evangelical Christianity, the California court case stands to have a marked impact on the fate of civil unions and gay marriage across the country. It’s already been made clear by Project Marriage supporters that they’re out to deny a portion of the citizenry their civil rights.

But sweeping statements like those above prove why this is a fight for more than the homosexual population. The CDC estimates more than seven million American women (between the ages of fifteen and forty-four) have fertility issues. That’s nearly twelve percent of the female population of childbearing age.

Currently, seven and a half percent of married women in that age range are infertile. And that’s just the women - studies posit forty percent of infertility issues in couples are from the male.

Ultimately, if they are going to use the inability to procreate as a reason gay marriage can’t be legalized, shouldn’t it apply to heterosexual couples?  This article addresses this argument quite nicely.  Well done. 
 

Television, Modern Families & 2010

With time on your hands over the holidays, I thought I would update everyone on a few interesting additions to the television line up.  Modern Families on ABC is a great show in many ways, as is shows how different families can be while poking fun at itself.  Some things are clearly cliche; but, you can't have everything! 

On the other hand, there is a new show, which Fertility Authority actually brought to my attention, called Find My Family.  It sounds like a good premise; however, what concerns us the most is the fact that it claims to bring families back together.  What I do hope is that they address what a family is and that they come in all shapes and sizes regardless of origin.

Happy New Year to all - this will be my last blog post until next week, so have a great week.  See you in 2010!!

NY Times Article on Surrogacy - the Debate Continues

With all of the attention this industry has given the NY Times Surrogacy article last week, which I myself had blogged about here, I wanted to give everyone a few additional updates to ponder.  Once is from the American Fertility Association, and the other is from the NY Times themselves with readers responding directly to the Editor.    I certainly hope that this article does more good than harm.  What do you think?

Happy Holidays!

Friday Legal Updates™ - India, Sperm Donation, Israel, Ireland & Virginia

Hello, and welcome to Friday Legal Updates regarding surrogacy, sperm donation, adoption, and other topics of interest.  TGIF!  Short but sweet so enjoy!

1. Florida - Florida Must Recognize Lesbian Adoption from Washington - The answer, an appellate court said earlier today, is that Florida must recognize the adoption.   In other words, when parenthood is established by adoption it is portable.

2. Virginia - Court Gives Full Faith and Credit to NC Custody Order for Gay Dads.  Three-judge panel of the Court of Appeals of Virginia ruled on November 24 that the Fairfax Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court had properly accorded full faith and credit, as required by the U.S. Constitution, to a North Carolina judicial decision awarding primary legal and residential custody of a child to two gay men (who are registered California domestic partners). Still pending before the lower court is a demand by the woman who served as surrogate mother for this child that the North Carolina custody ruling be modified to give her sole custody. One of the judges on the Court of Appeals argued in dissent that the case was not properly before the court for review.

3.  Pennsylvania - Court Orders Child Support from Sperm Donor.  might be the first of its kind in the U.S.  A Superior Court panel last week ordered a Dauphin County judge to establish how much Carl L. Frampton Jr. would have to pay to the birth mother of the 8-year-old boy and 7-year-old girl.  “I’m unaware of any other state appellate court that has found that a child has, simultaneously, three adults who are financially obligated to the child’s support and are also entitled to visitation,” said New York Law School professor Arthur S. Leonard, an expert on sexuality and the law.

4.  Ireland - Gay sperm donor should see his son.  DUBLIN (AP) -- The Irish Supreme Court ruled Thursday that a gay man who donated his sperm to a lesbian couple should be permitted to see his 3-year-old son regularly - in part because Ireland's constitution doesn't recognize the lesbians as a valid family unit.

5. Israel - Israel to Address Gay Surrogacy.  The Israeli Health Ministry is considering to allow gay couples to have a child through surrogate mothers, according to ministry legal adviser Mira Huebner-Harel.  Heubner-Harel announced Monday at an Israel Society of Obstetrics and Gynecology conference that the health ministry is planning to form a committee to update the law.  "The traditional family unit has been changing lately," said Huebner-Harel, reports Haaretz. "A man, woman and child was good, but the trend is changing, and we know of male couples who travel across the sea to have children through surrogates."

6.  India - Surrogacy should be governed by laws, not market: Panel.  Repulsed by commercialisation of surrogacy using reproductive technologies, the Law Commission has proposed a legislation to restrict it to altruistic arrangements and clearly define the rights of commissioning parents, child and the volunteering mother.  It also proposed that surrogacy should be governed by contract among the commissioning parents and the surrogate mother.

Have a great weekend!!

'Reproductive tourism's risks and ethics' by Corey Whelan

Hello, everyone, sorry for the long time between posts, but today is a great one by our own Corey Whelan of the American Fertility Association.  She wrote an excellent article in the Examiner on Reproductive Tourism that I think is a must read:

"Increasingly, we find ourselves living in a global society. Through online communication, and social networking initiatives like twitter and ......  read more here.

Ms. Whelan continue as follows: "This story does not represent an isolated incident.  Family formation and reproductive law attorney,  Theresa Erickson, Esq., has researched programs in places such as India, Thailand, and the Ukraine, where surrogacy is not regulated or supported by law.  Erickson has found that on average the financial costs are usually not much different from those found  in our country, especially when you figure in the risks that must be undertaken legally, particularly in places where the levels of medical technology, safety, and privacy regulation is lower than our own.

Erickson noted that the intended parents in this case thought they had done everything right.  They contacted the appropriate authorities early on in their search.  And yet, neither they, nor their babies, were protected by law.  Also unprotected in this case was their surrogate, or their anonymous Indian egg donor.

In countries where poverty is widespread, inferior medical care, as well as poor nutrition and substandard sanitary conditions are the consistent norm.  Indian women living under these conditions may feel a level of coercion  when considering the financial escape hatch that surrogacy can give them.  An Indian surrogate can expect to earn somewhere between $3,000- $6,000 as a surrogate.  In a country where the per capita income is not quite $500 per year, this is a staggering sum.

Is this exploitation?  Or is it rather a great opportunity for the women now being outsourced to play this role?  Says Prospective Families Donor Agency founder and long time donor advocate, Amy Demma, J.D.  "I have heard colleagues question pre-natal care and other clinical issues. There are risks, and they are serious".    

As there are no official records about surrogates kept in India, we do not know how many women give birth to babies in this way, nor do we know how many failed attempts there are.  We also do not know the quality of medical care that these women will receive after they give birth, or how they will be cared for if medical complications related to the birth occur.

Everything possible should be done  to obtain accurate information about the care your surrogate has and will receive both before,during, and after her pregnancy. "

Friday Legal Updates™ - Catholicism and Reproductive Technologies & Southern Australia Surrogacy Update

IVF, Reproductive Technologies, Catholicism, and Surrogacy in Australia are our updates for today.  In fact, just this week, the Catholic Church issued a statement that can be found here regarding couples who are infertile and how the Church views how they proceed in creating a family.  I found it to be interesting, but certainly painful for those Catholics who cannot conceive naturally. 

What is absolutely great; however, is that the American Fertility Association is having an upcoming webinar on Catholics and IVF: A Pastoral Approach as follows:

"Are you a Roman Catholic or married to one and considering IVF or other forms of ART for your family?  Does the Roman Catholic Church’s position raise concerns regarding your decision? 

This webinar will help prepare Catholics who are considering IVF / ART or have a child born as a result of IVF / ART to have a productive and respectful conversation with their pastors from the perspective of their lived experiences. The guest speaker will be Father Jon Pedigo, STL.

For more information, please email Corey at:  Corey@TheAFA.org"

Please consider attending if this is something that you are currently dealing with in your life.  I am certain it will be informative. 

Australia - Surrogacy is now legal for childless South Australian Couples.   Unfortunately, it only applies to heterosexual couples and for non-compensation surrogacy.  Definitely a step in the right direction - but there needs to be more inclusiveness.

TGIF and have a great weekend!

Friday Legal Updates™ - Croatia Update, Embryos Mishaps, Stem Cell Lawsuit, & Maternity Leave

TGIF to all!   I certainly need the weekend to relax - and to stay warm.  It is freezing in Southern California (I know, it is not really freezing, but it is for me!). 

Washington - "A judge dismissed a case this week by a Christian adoption agency's challenge to Obama administration regulations expanding stem cell research.

The case arose from a decision by President Barack Obama to lift restraints on stem-cell research that were put in place by President George W. Bush.

Nightlight Christian Adoptions contended in a lawsuit that the government's new guidelines will decrease the number of human embryos available for adoption. U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth called that assertion speculative. Donors, the judge said, still may choose to continue to store the embryos or give them to an adoption agency rather than donate them for research.

For Nightlight to have grounds to sue, Lamberth ruled, potential embryo donors have to choose to donate their embryos for research and not for adoption.

Nightlight helps individuals adopt human embryos that are being stored in fertilization clinics. Nightlight began the program in 1997, using some of more than 400,000 frozen embryos with infertile couples.

"We're considering filing an appeal," said Ron Stoddart, executive director of Nightlight Christian Adoptions of Anaheim Hills, Calif. "It's unfortunate that the court did not address the merits of the action and instead took the easy way out and said in essence that we were not affected by the new guidelines and therefore weren't entitled to sue."

UK - Two stories out of the UK today -

a.  Women Using Surrogates in Fight for Maternity Leave: "

Campaigners claim the authorities are discriminating against “rent-awomb” mothers and have submitted evidence to ministers warning against the practice. They are calling for a change in the law.

The Government published new guidelines on surrogacy last month which were aimed at improving the rights of surrogacy patients, but did not tackle maternity pay.

The current guidelines only allow women who undergo a successful pregnancy to paid leave. They get time off even if they are not the genetic parent.

But people who use a surrogate have no right to paid or unpaid leave to look after their newborn child.

Adoption leave is also unavailable, because it only applies where a child is newly placed by an adoption agency.

Fertility law firm Gamble and Ghevaert is writing to ministers demanding they tackle the problem.

Partner Natalie Gamble said surrogacy is still regarded as an “exotic rarity”, which means statutory maternity leave does not apply.

Ms Gamble said: “The lack of right to maternity leave is tied up with the fact the surrogate mother is regarded as the mother.

“In any other circumstances you would get maternity leave. Women aren't going to need a whole year. What would make sense is a system where you have some sort of sharing arrangement [for maternity leave].

“We also need to take account of our modern human rights and anti-discrimination laws which do not allow unfair treatment of minority groups, however small they are.”

More than 40 babies are born in Britain every year with the help of a surrogate. The majority are to women who are unable to carry their own baby for medical reasons.

There is opposition in Britain to surrogacy becoming a “commercial” transaction. Restrictions mean surrogates cannot be paid for their services, although they may receive expenses.

These restrictions have triggered a rise in couples going abroad. But foreign surrogacy can be fraught with problems and a baby can end up being “stateless”.

The surrogate mother also has the legal right to keep the child, even if it is not genetically related to her.

Surrogacy arrangements are not legally enforceable. This applies even if a contract has been signed and the expenses of the surrogate have been paid. In British law, the woman who gives birth is always treated as the mother."

b.  Women Fear that their babies are not theirs after lab errors: "IVF is gruelling, heartbreaking and harsh. It's a costly gamble in which you can stake a fortune, your health and your sanity, more often than not for nothing. The odds are stacked against you from the start. So at the time of my own embryo transfer, any fear of laboratory mix-ups was subsumed by anxiety over whether the damn thing was going to work or not. In the euphoria that came when I discovered that I was pregnant, I pushed to the back of my mind the dangerous possibilities surrounding a baby conceived outside your body.

One fertility counsellor – who does not want to be named – says that she deals with an increasing number of people who fear that the clinic may have made a mistake. "It's an issue for a lot of couples, particularly the women. Mothers need to be sure of that bond and it's not uncommon to experience doubt."

This uncertainty over maternity isn't something I share. My daughter couldn't look more like my son. It's the first thing everyone says when they peer into her pram. But anyone who has been through the process of IVF will be able to imagine the doubt, the corrosive guilt, that some parents experience.

Maria underwent IVF after several years of unexplained secondary infertility. She has a nine-year-old daughter, conceived naturally, and a two-year-old son, courtesy of IVF. "I felt almost straight away that my son was different. He doesn't look anything like any of us. We're both Mediterranean so we are all very dark and olive-skinned. My son has a pale, Celtic complexion and reddish hair. People often express surprise when they realise I'm his mother; someone even once asked me if he was adopted."

I ask her if her partner has the same doubts. "I think he does," she says, then amends this to: "I know he does. I've seen him looking at him with a strange expression on his face." But they've never discussed it? Maria is emphatic: "We couldn't. Having that conversation would be admitting something terrible. It's taken me a while to get to this point but he's ours, whatever. He's our son. We love him and that's that."

Another woman, Linda, has two children from IVF and says that she "strongly suspects" one of them isn't biologically hers. "I can't really explain it," she says, "it's just an instinctive thing. He smelt different as a baby, he looks different, he just is different. I love him – I love him to bits – but I feel more and more that he probably isn't mine."

For some, the temptation of a DNA test becomes overwhelming. Michelle, from Yorkshire, says she arranged one for her five-year-old daughter and then cancelled it the day before. "I decided I didn't want to know. The potential outcome was too frightening. I'd rather live with the not-knowing." Belinda did go as far as DNA testing her twin boys. "I was so sure, 100% sure, there had been a mistake. The clinic I went to was a shambles; the staff were so distracted; [the clinic] was later shut down after it failed an inspection. But the test turned out positive: they were ours. It was like finding out I was pregnant all over again."

Note:  From October 1, the HFEA has introduced new rules, which include stricter guidelines about the handling and storage of gametes and embryos. If these are adhered to, the hope is that these rare but devastating mistakes will vanish – and along with them any anxieties that parents might feel about their children.

Croatia - "The Croat parliament on Friday passed an amended law on in-vitro fertilisation (IVF) making it easier for couples to receive treatment to help them to conceive.

Under the revised law couples only have to sign a statement confirming they are in a relationship. Previously they had to prove before a court they had been together for three years.

The new law, however, will still ban the freezing of embryos despite strong criticism from the opposition and parents' groups.

"Freezing of embryos is the gold standard everywhere in Europe except in Croatia," deputy of the main opposition Social Democrats, Milanka Opacic, said before the vote.

She accused Health Minister Darko Milinovic of denying couples access to the best means of overcoming fertility.

Until the new law, which was adopted in its unamended form in July, the freezing of embryos had been used by Croatia's doctors in IVF treatments.

The former Yugoslav republic's original legislation dated back to 1978, the year that the world's first test-tube baby was born. At that time freezing of embryos did not yet exist as a fertility technique.

Under the new law, children conceived by donated eggs or sperm will also be able to obtain information about his or her biological parents when they reach 18 if donors have given their prior agreement."

Custody and Care of Your Genetic Property

The role of a trustee is expanding.  Trusts are evolving to harness medical advances. With the use of stem cells and other genetic material babies born today are expected to live over 100 years.

As part of this evolution, new state laws now make extracting live sperm from a dead body for later reproductive use legal. Cryobanks around the country are receiving customer deposits of frozen reproductive cells which include stem cells, cord blood, sperm, eggs and embryos. The courts have held that genetic material is property, like securities and may be bought, sold or transferred.

Unclaimed and abandoned property or genetic material in these banks, including sperm or embryos can be used to create a child through in vitro fertilization (IVF) without the knowledge or consent of the owner. This child, if conceived by a former wife or ex-girlfirend may have rights to an ultimate inheritance from the owners estate.

To account for this material, estate planners have begun to recommend adding provisions to their client’s trusts to be sure this property is managed properly after death – requiring trustees to understand this new language and take on new responsibilities.

Frozen Heirs

The process begins by storing sperm or an egg with the idea that a child may be born after the death of one of the parents. In the past, a child would be born after the death of his or her parent only if the father died during the pregnancy or the mother died during delivery. Most state’s laws account for this and protect an after born child to permit that child to inherit from the deceased father or mother. In other words, a child conceived during the parents’ lives is protected and is considered a lawful heir.

In 1999 everything changed with the birth of Brandalynn Vernoff, the first known child in the United States conceived with the sperm of a dead man. Brandalynn’s father, Bruce Vernoff, was only 35 when he died in 1995 from an accidental overdose of prescription medications. Thirty hours later, at the behest of Vernoff’s grief-shattered family, a doctor extracted five vials of Vernoff’s sperm and stored them in a sperm bank. In 1999, using advanced reproductive technology, a team of specialists posthumously fertilized Bruce’s widows’ eggs. The result was Brandalynn who arrived March 17, 1999 – almost four years after her father drew his last breath.

This is called posthumous conception. It is now possible and with the use cryopreservation, a family can complete its family formation objectives after the death of one on the parents.

But there are still pieces of this puzzle that need to be understood. First, how does a trustee arrange for collection of live sperm from their dead clients corpse? And, second, what inheritance rights does a posthumously conceived child have from their father’s estate?

First, as trustee, you should know, in advance, if the medical powers of attorney require the executor or trustee of the estate have sperm extracted and cryopreserved. Of course, you can avoid all of this ahead of your clients death by advising them to deposit eggs or sperm in a cryobank.

Hurry, We Need a Urologist

I interviewed Theresa M. Erickson, an astute and knowledgeable family formation lawyer based in San Diego, California. Erickson says, depending where you are “finding someone to extract sperm from a corpse may prove difficult.” She added, “most urologists are reluctant to perform the procedure.” Sperm is not preserved indefinitely in a dead body. It should be extracted within 36 hours or less. Although she said, ”one doctor told her that it can be good for up to one week.”

Therefore, for the trustee, when you receive one of these trusts, be sure you have a willing urologist available on-call as you never know when your client may suffer an accidental death. You might start by asking for a referral from Los Angeles Urologist Dr. Cappy Rothman, the physician who extracted the sperm in the Vernoff case. He is also a co-founder of the California Cryobank.

Once you have multiple vials of your deceased clients sperm, you as trustee, will need to get it deposited into a cryobank. To get clear on this, I interviewed Scott Brown, from the California Cryobank, America’s biggest and oldest sperm bank. Brown says is easy to make a deposit. This is usually handled though the physician that collected the sample. However, they will take a direct deposit from a trust company on behalf of their trust client. Opening an account and making a deposit is not like depositing money with Bank of America. Brown says you should have your attorney draw up an agreement. This agreement should be clear as to who is the sperms owner.

The next step for the family it to decide what to do with the sperm. This decision has to be made quickly. California laws say the sperm must create a child within 2 years from the death of the donor, or the child will not have an entitlement to an inheritance. It is legal to use the use the sperm beyond two years, but the child will not see any money from the estate.

All of these thorny issues involving family formation after death of a spouse should be spelled out long before the death of a family member. I found one estate planning law firm in Denver that deals with these issues head on. I interviewed Teresa C. Baird, last week. Her firm, Fairfield and Woods, PC  provided a sample trust provision for attorneys to address the inheritance rights of posthumously conceived children.

Barid gives her clients an intake questionnaire before drafting a will or trust. Baird always asks the question about cryo banking genetic materials — “its good practice.” She also asks, “what would you like to happen in the event of your death, would you like sperm or eggs deposited into a cryobank?”

Baird says the legal authority in this area is ”murky” at this time, but will likely be better defined as this practice increases. Baird says, “it is essential that planning take place, beginning with an critical conversation,  as very few courts have addressed these questions.”

Questions of Control

Both attorney’s Erickson and Baird agree that genetic property or materials need to be accounted for both before and after death.

While alive, any deposits made in the cryobank need to be correctly titled to either the owner of the material or the trust that governs its disposition. Therefore, when an estate planner creates at trust provision that requires the redemption of sperm or embryos from a cryobank it is important that the trustee have proper standing with the depository.

Brown from the California Cryobank says the instructions as to what to do with the material must come from the owner or the person who has a power of attorney. While alive this agreement should have specifics as to who has the right to contribute and withdraw these materials.

In following the death of the owner of such material it is important to specify in any trust provision that, in the case of sperm, that it be used only by a specific individual and for a limited time period.  Erickson pointed out that in a case where a celebrity or multi-millionaire that had former wives or girlfriends “you don’t want them coming forward and claiming the sperm and therefore a right to a child and its rightful inheritance.”

In addition to what may be available to a trust company client for legal remedies there are certain measures that the owner of sperm should do to keep track of his genetic property.

A Mischievous Mistress

Here is a hypothetical situation that might exist in the absence of controls of sperm. Let’s say you have a client who is 70 years old and is worth $100 million. He is married, has three children and a wife. In addition to his family life he has several mistresses, one of which has a hidden agenda.

As our multi-millionaire has frequent sexual relations with his mistress he is strict about using a condom.

At the end of each episode the mistress politely removes the condom filled with semen, takes it into the bathroom, and flushes the toilet. But instead of discarding the condom with the semen, she stores it in a plastic bag. After he leaves, she promptly takes it down to a cryobank and deposits it under her name.

Over the span of a ten year relationship she may have made dozens of deposits.

Then one day the multi-millionaire suddenly dies. He is not around to make any claim one way or another to have fathered another child but our mischievous mistress becomes impregnated with the multi-millionaire’s sperm, announces to the estate she is pregnant with his child. Her lawyers come to the trustee perhaps you, to  include her child in the class of beneficiaries for distributions to his children. At the end of the it is her word against the estates as to what the intent of the deceased client.

Of course this is a hypothetical but it can happen. There are two things that might be done when advising a multi-million dollar client:  1) Make certain that estate planning documents are crystal clear who are and are not legitimate children, entitled to the inheritance.  2) If one is having an affair it might be a good idea to take your soiled condom out the door with you!

As reproductive medical technology improves and more genetic property including sperm, eggs, embryos, stem cells and more get stored at cryobanks there will become an ever so important requirement for trust administrators to understand this new science and to be thoroughly familiar with how to both control and manage your client’s genetic property.

Jerry Cooper, senior editor, The Trust Advisor Blog. Steven Maimes contributed to the research.

Anonymity - Egg Donors, Sperm Donors, Embryo Donors, & the Donor Conceived Children

Alot of conversations have been going on these days regarding anonymity in the field of third party reproduction, and I agree that something needs to be done in the US very soon.    In fact, the recent case of Doe v. XYZ Company (75 Mass.App.Ct.311) has increased that attention, as it involves a case of a woman who gave birth to twins after artificial insemiantion using donor sperm.  The Plaintiff, the mother of these two girls, is asking for both Donor #D237's identity from the sperm bank, as well as child support from the donor himself

For now, the Massachusetts Court of Appeals has  remanded the issue to the trial court but declared "such cases cry out for legislation defining rights of the participants."  Unfortunately, without any statute in place, the Court cannot compel the defendant to reveal the identity of the anonymous donor.  

As a side note, the Plaintiff has since placed the children in state Department of Children and Families - for reasons not made clear in the ruling. 

So, where does that leave us as a society?  Many other countries require that the egg or sperm donor's information be released to the child once they are 18 years of age; h0wever, many fear that this will cause the number of donors to diminish as they have done overseas.

My other thought is that these donor conceived children should have some rights in this matter at some point - but how should we as a society handle this?  Donation is a positive thing in many aspects, as these children would not be in existence without the donation.  How does a donor conceived child respond to that aspect?

On the other hand, if someone is donating their genetics to help someone have a child, why should they be burdened with the obligations of a parent?   And, why should people have to give up the right to have a child with the use of a donor just because some people do not agree with it?   Julie Shapiro attempted to tackle this issue several times in her blog.

Well, I am currently working to develop my actual opinion at this point, as I was once an egg donor for quite a few couples as a matter of fact (including married couples, gay couples and  a single woman).  Do I mind if the children want my information?  Not at all.  Do I want to pay child support?  Hell no!  I have my own children, who are legally, genetically and socially my children. 

On the other hand, I also have twin nephews who are my brother's children legally and socially, yet not biologically.  Should he pay for their support?  Yes, as he chose to bring these children into this world.  But should my donor conceived nephews have access to their donors' information in the future - I think so but intially on a limited basis.  Maybe there is a way that we can compromise for all parties, as these children that are donor conceived are certainly loved and wanted.  

If the states want to legislate, we need to move towards a system where the donors information is stored for medical purposes and for potential contact in the future if all parties agree.  Most egg donors in particular are open to having contact in the future; however, not without being contacted beforehand by me so they can access the situation at the time they are asked. 

In fact, my office now offers Information Storage, which will maintain the  files for a minimum of 21 years (or longer if requested by the Parties).  In reality, we have been offering that service for over a decade, as I have always felt compelled to ensure that this information is available to the children and/or their parents.  Maybe this is  a compromise that will allow donor conceived children to be born to those families who need to use a donor to have a family, while permitting these children access without obligating the donors legally into support or parenting. 

Let me know your thoughts, as I think that a continued discussion will help me develop my opinion, as well as help others with theirs.

 

Children of Sperm and Egg Donation

There seems to be quite a bit of an uproar over the case involving the woman of sick twin daughters, who were conceived via sperm donation.   Some are saying that she signed on the dotted line, and some are saying that the clinic is obligated to provide her the information on the donor.  What do you think?  I think that the system regarding donations needs to be overhauled but via the clinics and agencies, not via the legislatures where the real issues are often misunderstood.  In fact, Sean Tipton of the ASRM stated it quite well as folllows: he states that he "believes the donor debate is best left between adults - not courts and legislatures."

“Most states have established a clear path for sperm donors to relinquish their parental rights and obligations,” Tipton said. “Agreements entered into need to be honored unless all parties agree to change the terms.”

I agree with that perspective, but these children and the parents of these children may need contact in the future, which I why I am a big advocate of this information being stored.  My office does it for a 21 year period in a very efficient and safe way, and it is time that others do the same.  Ultimately, we cannot force these donors to comply, but it should be an option. 

What are your thoughts?

Woman Implanted with Wrong Embryo & Carrying Baby to Term for Couple

A woman in Ohio was implanted with the wrong embryo eight months ago, and she and her husband decided to keep the pregnancy, despite the fact that they know that they will be saying "hello and goodbye" at the same time to the child that is not theirs. 

According to the couple, when they received the call from the doctor telling them that they were pregnant, the doctor also told them in the same sentence that it was the wrong embryo.  The doctor gave them the option to abort; however, they could not go against their religious beliefs.  I find this couple to be an honorable couple, and I hope that their journey ends well.  It appears that they intend to use their remaining embryos in a gestational carrier very soon, as the woman can no longer carry. 

A very sad story, and we hope them, as well as the child and his family, the best.  As for the IVF doctor and clinic, it was honorable that they informed the couple right away unlike Dr. Katz in California, who has since lost his license and who did not inform the woman until the child was 10 months old.  Unfortunately, providing the information right away still does not take away the damage that was done.

I am not sure what to say on this one.  I think this couple is incredible, but what an experience.  What do you think?

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Botched IVF Procedure at Clinic Finally Settles & Yet Another is Filed

The San Francisco Gate recently reported the following:

"A San Mateo County couple filed suit against a San Francisco fertility clinic this week, claiming the doctors implanted the wrong sperm into the woman's eggs and then destroyed the embryos without consent.

According to the complaint, filed Monday in San Francisco Superior Court, Katie Aschero, 31, of El Granada underwent egg retrieval in February in an effort to have a child with her husband, Robert, via invitro fertilization.

The Ascheros later learned that seven of the 13 viable embryos had been inseminated with another man's sperm and that the clinic's staff destroyed those embryos in violation of the couple's contract with Laurel Fertility Care in San Francisco, the complaint said.

The Ascheros' attorney, Nancy Hersh, said the clinic's decision to discard the embryos violated their contract."

[Editor's Note: This post was originally based upon a National Law Journal article.  Laurel Fertility Care has disputed some of the reporting by the National Law Journal; therefore, we are removing the disputed information in order to keep our readers from being influenced by material that may not be correct.]

Friday Legal Updates - Florida Personhood, UK Update, Wisconsin Surrogacy Insurance, & Croatia

Wow, can you believe that summer is officially over already?  I can't because of the blistering heat here in Southern California; however, another Friday is upon us with some legal updates for your thoughts and comments.

Florida - Last November, Colorado pro-life groups placed a ballot measure before the voters in order to extend "personhood" to the moment of conception.  This amendment was rejected by 73% of the voters in Colorado; however, the groups have now set their sites on Florida.  The new amendment would define even a newly formed embryo as a person.  The implications of this becoming law is an issue those suffering from infertility and living in Florida need to consider. 

Wisconsin - Two women have filed a case in Wisconsin where their insurers have denied them maternity coverage due to the fact that they were surrogates.  This issue is now before the State Supreme Court, so we will have to wait and see how this one ends and if it will have implications elsewhere. 

UK - Women whose embryos were to be destroyed in the next few weeks have been given an extension.  With the new HFEA of 2008, which comes into force on October 1, everyone with embryos in storage will be able to keep them there for a decade versus the previous law of 5 years.  "These new rules will come into effect on October 1 and I will be seeking to make an Order to Parliament to ensure this applies to embryos that are 'out of time' on that date."

Professor Lisa Jardine, chair of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA), said: "I am delighted that the Government has listened and made this common-sense decision.

"This will be an enormous relief to all of those people who faced the heartbreak of seeing their embryos destroyed all because of a matter of timing. We will be contacting clinics immediately so that they can inform the patients concerned and make appropriate arrangements for the continued storage of their embryos."

Croatia - The government moved Thursday to amend a law involving IVF after strong criticism from human rights and parents groups over its criteria for couples entitled to treatment. 

"Under the amendments forwarded to parliament, couples will now only have to sign a notarised statement confirming they are in a relationship rather than have to prove before a court they have been together for three years, Health Minister Darko Milinovic told a cabinet session.

Also as part of the changes, children conceived by donated eggs or sperm will now be allowed to obtain information about his or her biological parents once turning 18 only if donors have given their prior agreement.

However provisions in the law which ban the freezing of embryos will not be altered.

Croatia's original legislation on medically assisted reproduction dates back to 1978, when the world's first test-tube baby was born. The former Yugoslav republic had its first IVF baby five years later."

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FRIDAY LEGAL UPDATES - Criminals & Adoption, Battle over Surrogacy, & CA Same Sex Bill Passes

TGIF!   I hope that those who are celebrating Labor Day this long weekend have a great time - I know I will. 

New York - A history of crime and drug addiction spanning two decades should not bar a man from being able to adopt, so says a New York judge who credited the man's attempt to turn his life around.  This ruling will allow this man and his wife to be placed on the adoption list.  His last conviction was 1995, and he claims to be clean and sober since 2000 when he was released from prison.  Many think it was a good decision - what about you?  I know what Bill O'Reilly would say. 

California - Legislation authored by Senator Mark Leno that resolves ambiguities about how out-of-state same-sex marriages will be recognized in California passed the Assembly today with a 44-27 vote.

Senate Bill 54 bill clarifies that same-sex couples who married outside of California before Proposition 8 went into effect last year are recognized as married spouses, not unlike the 18,000 same-sex marriages performed in California. The legislation also confirms that same-sex couples who married outside California after Prop 8 went into effect on November 5, 2008, or plan to do so in the future, must receive the same rights, protections, benefits, obligations and responsibilities afforded to opposite-sex spouses, with the sole exception of the designation of "marriage."

Australia -  Couples dealing with infertility in Melbourne and the state of Victoria, Australia, will now require that all couples wanting to go through IVF first have a background police check.   Should the background check find any convictions for serious sex or violent crimes, past incidents of having children taken out of their care, or any other crime that is considered a potential risk to children – IVF should be forbidden to the couple.

As stated in the article, I also agree that someone with serious sex or violent crime in their past shouldn’t be raising kids; however, are they going to force everyone else in Victoria to use birth control? And only allow people to have children if they pass background checks?  Unlikely!

This law is unfairly targeting couples with infertility. It’s discrimination, and I too think it’s blatantly wrong.

Prague -    The Justice Ministry is seeking changes to legislation which would affect the legal rights of surrogate and biological mothers.

Under current Czech law, biological mothers are not guaranteed parental rights to a child born to a surrogate. The surrogate mother could gain custody rights to the child she carries and delivers.

The Justice Ministry wants to change this part of the law. "I've been thinking about changing the law since May. In the course of my career, I've met a number of clients interested in the issue," Minister for Justice Daniela Kovářová told Aktuálně.cz.

The Czech legal system permits surrogate motherhood but has no law dealing specifically with the issue.

BelgiumA Belgian couple who commissioned a surrogate mother to carry a baby for them are to appeal against a Dutch ruling awarding custody of the child to a Dutch family who bought her over the internet.

The girl’s biological father had sought a surrogate mother because his own wife was infertile. Baby Donna was born in 2005 using his sperm. However instead of handing over the baby as agreed, the surrogate mother said she had miscarried and sold the baby to a Dutch couple in Leusden.

Since then, baby Donna has been the subject of a string of court cases in Belgium and the Netherlands. Last year, a court in Arnhem gave the man the right to visit his biological child but turned down his demand that the child be returned to him.

The Belgian couple, who live in Antwerp, have always regarded themselves as the child's real parents. They call her Valentina.

Don't forget that Surrogacy Lawyer, Theresa M. Erickson, is conducting an online seminar about Surrogacy and Egg Donation to air on September 23, 2009

For additional information on The Surrogacy & Egg Donation Seminar please contact Sabrina Scialpi at 858-748-4133 or visit
www.ericksonlaw.net/surrogacy_egg_donation_seminar.html

Surrogacy and Egg Donation Online Seminar Hosted by California Surrogacy Lawyer Theresa Erickson

Surrogacy Lawyer, Theresa M. Erickson, is conducting an online seminar about Surrogacy and Egg Donation to air on September 23, 2009. “We realized there is a need for information on the process of Surrogacy and Egg Donation.  We also realize that with the current state of the economy, people just don’t have the funds or time it takes to travel to a conference, with that in mind we are holding an online seminar that anyone with a computer can attend,” states Theresa M. Erickson, Surrogacy Lawyer, CEO and founder of Conceptual Options. 

This Surrogacy & Egg Donation Seminar is aimed at informing and educating those suffering from infertility on the possibilities that exist for family building.  The topics to be discussed include explaining the process of third party assisted reproduction, as well as helping alleviate the uncertainty of the journey, such as medical insurance issues, obtaining birth certificates and passports, citizenship issues, and taking your baby home.  Attendees will also receive a “goodie bag”  for attending via mail after the seminar.

“During these times of uncertainty and with the recent media coverage of surrogacy and egg donation, we are certain that these informational seminars will help dispel some of the miss-information that is being dispensed by the uninformed.  Assisted reproduction is a safe, legal and effective way for those who are unable to build their family through traditional methods,” states Surrogacy Lawyer Erickson.

We have combined our drawing for a Free Egg Donation Cycle with our recent conference in Genève, Switzerland.  One lucky seminar attendee from these two events will be awarded a Free Egg Donation Cycle, which can also be used in conjunction with someone using a surrogate.  “Dr. David Smotrich and La Jolla IVF have generously given their services for this Free Egg Donation cycle, while Conceptual Options is providing the egg donor and cycle coordination.  The surrogacy and egg donation law firms of Myers & O’Hara and Erickson Law will be providing free legal representation for the egg donation cycle and Egg Donation Lawyer Theresa M. Erickson will be sponsoring all of the donor medications,” states Ms. Erickson. 

The keynote speaker at this seminar will be Surrogacy lawyer Theresa M. Erickson.  Ms Erickson is a globally recognized expert in this specialized area of law. Attorney Erickson is also involved in this community by volunteering her time for as a board member of the American Fertility Association and as the legal director of Parents Via Egg Donation, while sponsoring events that promote awareness in this field.  She is also the author of Assisted Reproduction, the Complete Guide to Having a Baby with the Help of a Third Party. Her next book is currently being finalized for publication.

For additional information on The Surrogacy & Egg Donation Seminar please contact Sabrina Scialpi at 858-748-4133 or visit
www.ericksonlaw.net/surrogacy_egg_donation_seminar.html

 

 

Friday Legal Updates - Surrogacy Legal Battles, Federal Suit Blocking Embryos Research, & Sperm "Brokers"

Good Morning and TGIF to all!   Hope you are well.   Morning radio show starts in about an hour, so here are your Friday Legal Updates.  They are mostly international stories with a federal law suit just filed also added.  Enjoy!

United States - Federal Law Suit Filed to block federally funded human embryo reserach.  "A group of plaintiffs filed a federal lawsuit today in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to "enjoin and overturn the controversial guidelines for public funding of embryonic stem cell research that the National Institutes of Health issued on July 7, 2009," according to a press statement...."

It will be interesting to watch this suit play out.  What are your thoughts on stem cell research?

UK - Two directors of a fertility company appeared in court yesterday accused of illegally delivering sperm to women by courier.  They are to appear in court next month.  This is a test case under the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act of "procuring sperm".  They face two years in jail. 

Australia - A couple must battle the courts to adopt their own son.  I blogged on this case already, but I wanted to repost as I really feel for this couple.  Grandma carried her grandson for her daughter.  Apparently, surrogacy law in NSW has not kept up with science. 

Poland - A surrogate mother is fighting for custody of the child that she gave birth to for another couple from Warsaw.  Polish law does not regulate surrogacy, and despite a written agreement, this looks like a battle for this couple with their gestational carrier.

Uruguay - Uruguay is one step closer to becoming the first country in Latin America to permit same-sex couples to adopt children.  Uruguay had authorized same-sex civil unions last year.

New Zealand - Parents of surrogate born daughter battle to bring her home from Thailand.  The couple is heartbroken as the little girl is the daughter of the Thai surrogate in New Zealand, but the couple are her parents in Thailand.  The couple claims to sought legal advice, but this unfortunately looks like another issue with fertility tourism in certain countries.

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Does Theresa Erickson Eat Cupcakes?

You bet I do.....but, just when they involve educating those who are desperate and vulnerable and need some guidance. 

In conjunction with the American Fertility Association, I will be hosting a "Dessert & Learn."  Please join us in beautiful La Jolla, California.

See Corey's blog post here:

by Corey Whelan

Have you met her?  One of the most knowledgeable and compassionate attorneys in this field; plus she has the most astonishing savvy.  A true thoroughbred, inside and out.  I’m proud that Theresa sits on The AFA’s board of directors and am grateful for the wisdom she has brought to these blog pages. 

 The AFA is big on creating soft spaces for people to learn in.  Why shouldn’t life have some sweetness, even when you are struggling to create your family?  So when Theresa came to us and said she wanted to reach out to the people of La Jolla who are interested in third party reproduction, we knew we had to find the right place for folks to get to know her, and benefit from what she has to bring to the table, especially if that table features a dessert buffet.

Enter CUPS.  CUPS is a brand new, organic bakery that specializes in?  You guessed it.  Cupcakes.  Exotic, amazing, silly, frivolous, and organic baked creations, guaranteed to shift your reality from oy to yum.   

Perfect.

Except for one tiny detail.  CUPS is so new, they are not even open yet.  But Michelle, CUPS owner and an attorney in her own right, believes so strongly in The AFA’s mission that she is lending us her gracious and magnificent estate for this season’s premier Dessert & Learn event. 

So…..please join us poolside at Rancho La Jolla.  We will be having an intimate and relaxed chat with Theresa about ovum donation, surrogacy, and everything third party repro.      

I’ll save you a bite.

For more info on our upcoming Dessert & Learn, click here.

 For info on Erickson Law, click here.

For info on CUPS Organic Bakery, click here.

Friday Legal Updates - California Bill, Chicago Scammer, Ohio (oh, my), Michigan & embryos, DC & same sex couples, & International Issues

Hello!   I am back after a two week hiatus on my Friday Legal Updates, but it is summer so the wheels of justice turn slowly, as does legislation.  Either way, here are today's updates for the last few weeks:

California - The California Legislature is getting back into the Prop 8 fight with a bill that would recognize those same-sex marriages performed legally outside of California before the measure had passed.  SB54 also intends to ensure that gay and lesbian couples who have been married legally in other states and countries since November 5th when Prop 8 became official can receive all the rights and obligations that opposite sex Californian couples enjoy.

Illinois - More couples are coming out of the woodwork regarding a surrogate who had scammed them into believing that she was pregnant with their baby.  Beware!

Ohio - A Republican lawmaker in Ohio is re-introducing a bill that would give a man the final choice on whether the woman he got pregnant can have an abortion.  I am so "impressed" that a man can force a woman to keep the baby, but the bill mentions nothing about forcing him to be a good father or provide financial stability. 

DC - A new DC law is making it alot easier for a newborn to have two moms at birth.  Lesbians who create a child via artificial insemination will no longer have to adopt their children that have been born to their partners.  A similar law is to go into effect in New Mexico in 2010.  This is a huge step for same sex couples, as they do not have to go through the time consuming and expensive legal process that is not required of heterosexual couples who use artificial insemination. 

Croatia - Croatia continues to tighten their laws on fertility treatments by forbiding the freezing of embryos.  It also limits the number of embryos used to three and for unmarried couples, they must prove that they have been together for at least three years. 

Romania - 30 Israelis were detained in an egg trafficking case.  It sounds like the issue is on its way to being resolved from more recent reports; however, I certainly hope that this is not an issue of human trafficking. 

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Justice Sotomayor - How Will Her Confirmation Affect Those Suffering from Infertility?

As was posted today on the AFA website, I wanted to provide you something interesting to read today on the Supreme Court Nominee:

While watching the confirmation hearings last week (yes, I am one of those dorky lawyers), I was listening for any cues regarding how she may address a case that involved fertility treatments, fertility coverage, pregnancy discrimination (including pre-pregnancy for IVF treatments) and, of course, a woman’s right to chose, including the right to privacy involving medical treatments.  Now, mind you, I understand regulation may be needed in some areas of this industry, but I also do not want to see the government restricting our ability to create a family, regardless of marital status, age, or sexual orientation.  Again, these are issues that must be determined between a physician and their patient when he or she is accessing the health risks for the woman carrying the children, as well as any harm that may come to the future children in terms of prenatal health. 

I did discover, despite her attempts otherwise, that she appeared to hold a liberal point of view in many ways, which despite my own leanings, is important when it comes to autonomy for those patients and those involved in this industry.  However, regardless of her political stance, what is important is that she applies the law neutrally with a perspective of her life experience.  I know that many do not agree with that statement, but we all must agree that it is not humanly possible to take one’s own life experiences out of the picture when making decisions.  What we do want is for judges to use that experience, while simultaneously utilizing an objective vision when making decisions that will affect us all, as well as future generations.

Of course, much of what we do and what our clients/patients deal with is family law.  Judge Sotomayor has little experience in that area due to her previous posts as a federal judge, as most Supreme Court judges.  Even the Supreme Court itself has little experience in that area.  The most notable family law case is the case of Troxel v. Granville in which the Supreme Court did strike down a trial court judge’s decision to allow grandparent visitation involving a completely fit mother.  They were concerned that the judge had used his personal experience in making the decision since he stated he truly enjoyed his time with his grandparents as a child.  But, as I stated above, personal experiences do shape our lives and how we shape our decisions; however, in this case, the Court did not state that the judge did anything wrong in doing so, it was merely that it was a case with a backdrop of a fit mother.  Different set of facts could have created a different ruling. 

Now, with that in mind, Justice Sotomayor is a woman – she has no children, and she has been battling diabetes since the age of 8.  Does that make her more sympathetic to our plight or not?  I am not certain, as we do not know why she does not have children or if it was a path she chose.  But, we do know that she knows what it is like to battle a disease that controls your life, which should be good for those of us in the community. 

Remarkably, after reviewing her previous decisions, I was unable to locate much information on how she would rule if any such case comes before her.  In fact, she has not dealt with stem cell research regulation of Assisted Reproductive Technologies, healthcare choices, or on-point abortion cases; however, there are a few notable cases that she has dealt with as a judge:

1.  Saks v. Franklin Covey Co (316 F.3d 337 (2d Cir. 2003)) – This is a bioethical issues case in which she joined a Second Circuit opinion rejecting a claim that exclusion from coverage of surgical impregnation procedures, including in vitro fertilization, violated Title VII and the “Pregnancy Discrimination” Act.  Note that this does not assume that she is against IVF, only that she did not judge that that particular case was within the parameters of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, which is her duty as a judge – to interpret law, not make laws.  For changes like this to be made, we need to address our Congress to have them amend these laws as they currently stand. 

2.  Center for Reproductive Law and Policy v. Bush (304 F.3d 183 (2d Cir. 2002)) – Judge Sotomayor found that a “reproductive rights” group had standing to challenge the Mexico City Policy.  She concluded that the group had “competitive advocate standing,” on the grounds that the government’s allocation of a benefit “creates an unequal playing field” for organizations advocating their views in the public arena.  She agreed that the government had a rational basis for favoring “the anti-abortion position over the pro-choice position” with public funds.  Again, as the above case, since this case is not on point, we truly do not know how she would rule regarding the right to life, the right to abortion, status of embryos, etc.

Ultimately, based on her performance at the hearings and her record, and despite a few bumps in the road involving the case of the firefighters, it does appear that she will be confirmed prior to the start of the next Supreme Court session.  And, of course, I am truly excited, as a woman, as a lawyer, and as a member of the US Supreme Court Bar, that there is another woman on the bench.  Call me sexist, call me whatever you want, but we need diversity on the bench so that those who have never “walked in our shoes” can see the perspective, albeit objectively, when our cases come before them. 

Friday Legal Updates - Fertilty & Insurance, Kansas Agency, Baby Scammer, Embryo Dispute, Custody Battle, NY Stalls Same Sex Bill & Adoption Agency Bankruptcy

Yes!  It is finally Friday, and I am ready for the weekend.  Remember, it is less than two weeks to our conference in Switzerland.  Alot of updates this week, so enjoy....

1.   California - The District Court of Appeal has thrown out an appeal by a woman struggling to conceive a chiled via IVF.  She was challenging the limited coverage provided for fertility treatment by her employer's group health care plan.  InYeager v. Blue Cross of California, she alleged causes of action for unfair competition and false advertising.  Although the employer chose not to offer $2000.00 of infertility coverage, Yeager went after Blue Cross for these above reasons, including stating that the $2000.00 offered by BC does not constitute coverage under the statute. 

2.   Kansas - Clients say that a surrogacy agency in Kansas has kept their money. "The owner of the agency, Michelle Faulkenberry, stopped returning calls from Winters and the couple, and stopped reimbursing Winters for her expenses, Winters said.

Court documents, interviews with clients and surrogates and an affidavit by a Wichita Police Department detective show complaints dating to 2001 that Faulkenberry dipped into clients' escrow accounts -- money meant to cover medical bills and other expenses -- for her own use. Faulkenberry declined to comment for this story.  Her agency, Alternative Family Building, was the second surrogate agency that Faulkenberry had started and closed, court records show.Unlike 29 other states that have some laws regarding surrogacy -- most of which void paid contracts -- Kansas does not regulate such agencies." 

In fact, the article continues with this: "Looking back, Mike said there were signs that Alternative Family Building might not have been as legitimate as some other agencies. For one, he said, Alternative Family Building's fees were much lower.  "The fees were low enough that I figured it was worth the risk," he said.

3.   Chicago, IL - Day in court for accused baby dreams scammer - A 31-year-old Chicago woman is accused of using the Internet to take advantage of desperate people.

WBBM's Steve Miller has the story of that woman - and the people who believe she should be put away forever.
 
Her name is Teandrea Watson, and she has billed herself as a surrogate mother. A beauty pageant queen. A graphic designer.  Others say Watson robbed them of their dreams - after she signed a contract to be a surrogate mother.

Teandrea Watson appears in court today, accused of cheating that man from Maryland, and his wife, out of money - and a baby they so desperately wanted.

4.   OhioEmbryo Dispute detailed in Lawsuit - Lori Johnson was excited about trying to have her third child and ecstatic that Montgomery's Bonnie Bernard would help. 

Bernard operates a company called Embryos Alive out of her Pfeiffer Road home that links embryo donors with people like Johnson, an infertile Texas wife. "It seemed like one of those things that was too good to be true," Johnson said.  Initially impressed by Embryos Alive, Johnson eventually came to feel she was bullied by a "callous" Bernard.

A lawsuit filed by Johnson in Hamilton County - against Embryos Alive, Bonnie Bernard, her husband, Gary Bernard, and another relative, Scott Hasselring - accuses Bernard of turning on Johnson after she challenged what she considered improper procedures by the company.

"I felt taken advantage of," Johnson said. "People who suffer from infertility have a painful and costly journey. To have someone give you hope and then take your money in exchange for that hope ... is definitely salt in the wounds."  Johnson alleges Bernard and Embryos Alive defamed her with false postings on the Embryos Alive online support group board, breach of contract and consumers sales laws, fraud and misrepresentation.

5.   Florida - Two Gay Couples Fight over Custody of Child -  "Two dads face off against two moms. It's perhaps the most unique custody battle in recent Florida history and maybe the most radical verdict. Katherine and her eight-year partner, Ana Sobrino, decided to have a baby about a half-decade ago. Again and again, they tried using sperm from anonymous donors. But Katherine — a driven real estate agent then in her late 30s — couldn't get pregnant.

Enter their close friend, Ray, a handsome, gay Air Force veteran.

After some casual negotiation, he donated and Katherine conceived. In August 2006, a sweet and burbling baby whom we'll call Austin was born. Katherine put Ray's name on the birth certificate because she wanted the child to know his dad's identity - That turns out to be a big mistake.

The baby was raised mostly by Katherine and Ana at their NE 24th Street home, but Ray and his partner Craig also spent time with the boy. "[Ray] made it clear he wanted to be involved in the child's life," a counselor later wrote. He took Austin to baby music lessons. Sometimes the child would sleep over at his "da-da's" apartment overlooking a canal. Then, last fall, the mothers decided to move to California, and things got ugly.

Ray sued Katherine in November 2008. The case tells the story of two sets of gay parents — all of them loving and active in the child's life — vying for custody. "Responsibility for the child should be awarded to the mother and father equally," Ray demanded in the suit. "[I am] the natural father." 

After considering arguments from both sides, Miami-Dade Circuit Court Judge Leon Firtel on June 3 found Ray was nothing more than a sperm donor. Because there was no contract before birth, he had "no rights." Says Ray's attorney, "[The ruling] is the most tragic of my career, and I will not rest until Ray is reunited with his son."

Opposing council responds that Ray surrendered his role when he let the mothers become primary caregivers: "Ray has changed his mind about his parental role... Katherine and Ana feel like their family unit is being attacked."  A motion for reconsideration is scheduled in circuit court this week.

6.   New York - Gov. Paterson will delay his plan to force a vote on a bill to legalize same-sex marriage until early September because the Senate is too unsettled now to take it up, his spokesman said on Friday. 

“Governor Paterson believes that marriage equality is an important civil rights issue and will be working with Senate leaders to move the process forward,” said the spokesman, Peter E. Kauffmann, adding that the governor was more immediately focused on the state’s dwindling tax revenues.  Mr. Kauffmann said the governor would probably call a special legislative session in early September so lawmakers could close an anticipated hole in the state’s budget.

7.   Canada - Adoption Agency's Bankruptcy strands families -  An Ontario agency specializing in adoptions from Africa has gone bankrupt, leaving scores of families across Canada disappointed and in financial debt.  Kids Link, which operates as the Imagine adoption agency in Cambridge, put up a bankruptcy notice on their website on Monday to inform their roster of more than 200 clients of their financial difficulties.  

An official with the Waterloo Regional Police fraud department told ctvtoronto.ca that he has received many calls from clients of the agency who are worried that their money was stolen."I can tell you it's not a criminal investigation," said Sgt. Robert Zensner. "We are not investigating anyone in the company or anyone linked to the agency."  He said that could change once BDO completes their review of the agency's books.  "If they find any criminality than they would contact us but we have to wait for their review," he said. "At this point, we're hands off."

That's it!  Have a great weekend.

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Friday Legal Updates - Surrogate Children, Georgia Embryo Law, IVF Treatments, Foreign Adoptions, & Embryo Mix-Ups

Hello and TGIF!  Sorry I missed you last week, but I was away relaxing on vacation in Hawaii.  We have quite a few updates today, so please comment on those that are interesting or those that make you want to respond.  Happy Friday!

California/Texas - Court Tosses Claim by Children Born to a Surrogate - The District Court of Appeal yesterday threw out the claims of 15 year old twins born to a surrogate mother against the Texas estate of their biological father asserting breach of the surrogacy agreement due to the father's failure to support them as time barred.  The actual story sounds like a scene from the show "Dallas," so be sure to read the link above. 

Georgia - The new law allowing families to adopt embryos is now in effect in Georgia.  The law aims to prevent embryo donors from later asserting legal rights to children born from embryo adoption.  Personally, I think that this will make embryo donation more costly, but we shall see. 

Federal - A Federal Appeals Court has ruled that a woman cannot be fired for absenteeism related to fertility treatments.  The US Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ruled that Title VII does prohibit an employer from doing so.  A trial is still pending so we will have to see what happens as this case progresses.

Federal - Congress is introducing a bi-partisan bill, entitled FACE Act (S. 1359), which intends to eliminate many of the hurdles internationally adopted children of American citizens currently face before they can come home to the US, which is often a lengthy and expensive process. 

UK - Chairman of British Fertility Society warns that IVF mix-ups "will continue."  In fact, he is not certain if the new systems being put into place will help, as human error is always a possibility.  He did not that the number of mix-ups were small; however, he needs to think more of those that it has affected versus the number.  Don't you think?

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Friday Legal Updates - Donor Offspring, IVF Blunder in UK, Michigan Embryo Legislation & More

Well, another week has come and gone, but for those of us who are Americans, next week is the 4th of July, which means family celebrations for most.  Today, I want to tell those who are still longing for a family of their own that there is hope.  Be patient, get educated, and hang in there. 

Now, onto the updates:

Iowa - Dead Iowan Father's Child - will his daughter receive survivor benefits.  In a case similar to the one that I addressed here in California last week on my blog, her mother is trying to fight for Social Security Survivor Benefits for Byrnn, now 6, conceived through IVF two years after her father died.  Again, this result is based on 150 year old Iowa law, as in the California and Arizona case, but her mother is challenging the decision - and she intends to take it all the way to the US Supreme Court. 

My take on this - make certain estate planning documents are in order for the future use of your genetic material, although it would not have made a difference in this particular case. 

Michigan - Michigan Lawmakers Prepare Bills to Monitor the activities surrounding the donation and destruction of embryos.  The one bill in particular is called the Embryo Research and Fertility Clinic Transparency Act (Senate Bills 647-652)

New York - Fertility Authority has received investments totalling $500,000.00

"7.3 Million Americans struggle with fertility issues and are looking for quality information and support that only www.fertilityauthority.com provides. The $4 Billion fertility industry is without a "go-to" source for accurate and up-to-the minute content. FertilityAuthority.com was launched on February 25, 2009 and has not looked back. CEO Gina Bartasi says, "Our goal has always been to provide the best fertility content on the web, and users are recognizing the quality of our site. Investors have witnessed our early success and want to be a part of our future growth."

The funds will be used to enhance the site's technology, boost revenue capabilities, generate additional content and continue to aggressively build traffic. Bartasi has not ruled out an institutional raise adding "Our clients are asking us for custom websites, online appointment booking software, expanded video content and additional technological innovation that will help their businesses grow. Our focus is to serve their needs and exceed their expectations". New clients that have already put their confidence in FertilityAuthority.com include several prominent regional fertility centers as well as specialty pharmaceutical firms Columbia Laboratories and Ferring Pharmaceuticals. "

United Kingdom - Why Am I Dark, Daddy?  Another IVF blunder in the UK haunts another family. 

"When ten-year-old Michael Williams climbs into his father Keith's arms for a goodnight cuddle, he will often ask the same dreaded question: 'Why am I brown?' Looking up into his father's blue eyes and taking in his light brown hair and fair skin, his son will then ask: 'How can I make myself lighter, like you?'

Keith doesn't know how to answer these questions, so he'll make a joke about how Michael was delivered by a stork or that he was found under a gooseberry bush. Anything to avoid having to tell him the truth.

For the reality is that not only was Michael conceived via IVF using donor sperm, but there was a terrible mix-up when the wrong sperm was mistakenly used by the hospital fertility clinic the couple attended in their hope of becoming parents. "

Canada - Canadian Donor Offspring has created an initiative in response to the lawsuit filed by Olivia Pratten back in October of 2008.  The site is an attempt to fundraise on her behalf, as well as others in her situation.  The site is located here.  What are your thoughts on this issue?

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The American Fertility Association & The Frozen Embryo Dilemma

With so much in the press these days about donor anonymity and how to handle that in the future, I wanted to post an article from the AFA that also talks about how to deal with the future issues in ART.  Enjoy, and let me know your thoughts!

"A Matter of Privacy, Responsibility and Choice

It’s a private issue gone very public. It’s a complex web of personal philosophy, religious orientation and social conscience about which everybody, and we mean everybody, has a strong opinion. But the fact is, and should be, what you do with the frozen embryos you don’t use is your decision and yours alone.

Of course it never feels like the quite right time to discuss this touchy topic.

Maybe you’re taking your first steps on the infertility treatment path. Along with all the mind-numbingly complicated instructions, you’re handed a form asking you what to do with excess embryos before you have a single one.

Maybe you already beat the odds. With absolute devotion, you danced the assisted reproduction tango, created viable embryos and made a baby. Or two or three. Your family is complete. Your head is bursting with school, soccer, recitals and bedtimes. Frozen embryos?

Or maybe you’ve given up on treatment, leaving behind the heartbreak, the disappointment and possibly, a few fertilized eggs. You’ve moved on.

So chances are pretty good that those embryos, protected in liquid nitrogen, aren’t at the top of your to-do list. None of us who have experienced infertility anticipates having any embryos, let alone extras. After we’re done with ART, we tend to ignore or deny the delicate question of disposition of the unexpected surplus.

At some point, though, all of us with cryopreserved embryos will have to make a final and forever decision about them. It’s not easy. They’re our unique responsibility and our unique burden. Because while our embryos remain suspended in time, we don’t.

Hence, this fact sheet, a guide to anticipating some of the quandaries we confront and exploring the choices we have.

The Options

A good initial cryopresevation consent agreement usually outlines three disposition choices:

  • Thawing without intent to transfer. Lucinda Veeck, M.L.T.,D.Sc., Director of Embryology at the Center for Reproductive Medicine and Infertility in New York City, says at her program, 53% of the 364 patients who have gone through with their choice have elected this option.
  • Donation for research. While raging controversy and federal limits have restricted directed giving to stem cell research, there are myriad other well-accepted research initiatives, such as staining for DNA and genetic analysis that rely on embryos. And despite the ban on federal funding for stem cell work, privately funded institutions are moving forward. Reports Dr. Michael Alper of Boston IVF, one such center, “There is no shortage of donations.
    At CRMI, Dr. Veeck reports that about 41% of patients have gone the research route.
  • Donation to other infertile people. Logistically and emotionally complex, donation for transfer has its own guidelines established by the American Society of Reproductive Medicine. It’s a many-layered effort by both the donors and recipients, requiring a six-month quarantine of the embryo, blood and genetic testing and retesting of donors, blood tests for the recipients. Both parties must sign informed consent documents addressing relinquishment and acceptance of parental rights should children result, as well as liability, among other things. Whether or not it is an anonymous transaction, both donors and recipients are strongly urged to get psychological counseling.
    “We’ve only donated embryos from two patients because of the difficulties inherent to follow-up testing,” remarks Dr. Veeck. “And in the 6% group desiring to donate, most have not actually given away their embryos yet.”

How Was I Supposed To Know?

These days, even before there’s an embryo, there’s the consent form. That daunting document demanding that a patient know, ahead of time, what to do with remaining embryos…if there are any. For infertile people, that’s one incomprehensibly huge “if.”

So hopeful patients fill in the blanks with the best intentions. The rub is that when it actually comes time to act on that initial agreement, people often find that first choice isn’t the one they want after all. It’s important to remember that first consent form is not the actual disposition form. You can shift gears at any time.

Changes of heart happen for a million different reasons: divorce, the death of a spouse, economic hardship, a multiple birth after the first cycle. Sometimes the partners in a relationship simply aren’t on the same page – one may want more children, the other has no interest. One partner may see the embryos as their potential children, the other regards them as left over sperm and eggs.

Inevitably, life’s constant evolution leads to embryos that sit, sometimes for an embarrassingly long time.

“People have them frozen and then forget about them,” says Dr. David Hoffman, Medical Director at IVF Florida/Reproductive Associates in Margate, Florida. “But they still don’t want to get rid of them. I don’t think patients think of a frozen embryo as a person, but it’s tough to let go.”

Dr. Veeck adds, “Many patients respond by doing nothing. They continue paying for storage fees rather than make a decision. And I think that’s the appropriate thing until they’re quite sure what they want to do.”

Behind the Choices

The language of disposition seems straightforward and precise. In fact, most people are sandbagged by how profoundly affected, confused and conflicted they are when it comes time to commit.

So, most elect to do nothing. Make no mistake; doing nothing is making a decision. Endless postponements means someone else-a family member or the clinic—may get stuck on the horns of what is rightfully your dilemma.

Overwhelmingly, frozen embryos are intended for use by the couples that created them. But IVF centers around the country report that the sheer number in storage is putting a squeeze on space, with some embryos in residence for a decade or more. Increasingly, centers are attempting to contact patients who haven’t been active for several years. It can be an onerous and difficult task, and on occasion, pointless.

At CRMI, Dr. Veeck puts the abandonment rate at about 10%. That’s after three registered letters, using search agencies and making countless phone calls.

Not all clinics have the wherewithal or the intention of going to such lengths. But most clinics will not dispose of embryos without an explicit, legal go-ahead from patients.
For the most part, says Dr. Hoffman, “couples usually pop up out of nowhere” when they’re notified that unless they respond, the embryos will be discarded.

Contrary to all the hype, Dr. Hoffman notes there are “very few not spoken for. The government thinks there are huge numbers out there. But there aren’t a lot of abandoned embryos at all.”

In other words, the vast majority of us with excess embryos are left to wrestle with our personal convictions and moral codes.

What Gives Meaning

For some people, contributing their embryos to research in an effort to help others gives them a sense that their assisted reproductive efforts have lasting value. “It’s a way of giving back to medicine and it makes them feel good,” says Dr. Alper of Boston IVF.

For others non-viable thawing provides closure. “It’s interesting, but people are very relieved when their embryos are discarded,” observes Adele Kauffman, Ph.D., and program psychologist at Reproductive Science Center in Waltham and Boston. “Embryos in the freezer are unfinished business. Once it’s done, they feel they’ve come full circle.”

Still others, impelled by altruism, empathy, or religious beliefs to help other infertile people, want to offer their frozen fertilized eggs for transfer.

“Initially, I thought it would be the option everyone would choose,” says Dr. Veeck at CRMI. “But when they think that they might have offspring out there and not know them or how they’re going to be brought up, they usually reconsider.”

In a recently published article, Dr. Craig Syrop at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, notes that

Of 365 couples with embryos stored after two years, 12% “indicated a willingness to donate to other couples (was) nearly equal to the desire of couples to donate to research.” But, he finds, when faced with the “reality of clinic visits for counseling, STD testing, and informed consent before embryos are donated and utilized” interest wanes and research outstrips donation to others by nearly 2 to 1.

The Donation Drama

Embryo donation for transfer is a media magnet, drawing tremendous attention when some began referring to transfer donation as “embryo adoption.” It is not.

“Adoption is a specific legal framework with specific guidelines around parental rights and obligations and applies to only living children,” says Susan Crockin, a Boston area attorney specializing in reproductive matters. She calls donation for transfer a “positive, but limited” option. She notes that five states have laws on the books dealing with this form of embryo donation, but nowhere is it the legal equivalent of adoption.

While the federal government is on the cusp of launching public education campaign advocating “embryo adoption,” Crockin calls it a misnomer that may make people feel good but “glosses over the legal reality.” At a minimum she recommends a legal agreement between donor and recipient; and consider, in those states without an embryo donation law, that the recipients go to court to have themselves declared the parents of a resulting offspring to avert the risk of custodial claims by the genetic parents or the extended family.

However, things blur on the psychosocial front where, psychologists say, the adoption parallel is stronger.

Embryo donors and recipients should expect that resulting offspring will want information about their genealogy, their genetic makeup, and their biological parents. Donors must be prepared for the possibility of a knock on their door one day even if the transaction was strictly anonymous. As decades of experience with adoption have shown, kids will come searching. Furthermore, laws protecting anonymity are subject to change.

“We’re in uncharted territory here,” said Dr. Elaine Gordon, a Los Angeles psychologist. Dr. Gordon says she’s getting more inquiries about embryo donation for transfer but many go nowhere.

“They find it too complicated and overwhelming in terms of what’s required,” she observes. “If they’re going to do it right, does it mean engaging in a relationship with the recipient couple and do they want to participate in that?”

She suggests that “responsibly done” ovum donation might provide the best model, with both parties entering into a “contract detailing terms of contact, if any, and information disclosed and exchanged. If the two parties can come to a meeting of the minds, the exchange can take place, facilitated by psychological, medical and legal experts.”

Embryo Donation Programs

There are several embryo donation programs, including the Christian faith-based agency, Snowflakes, that promotes “adoption.” At the root, all the programs facilitate matching donors with potential recipients and work through the details of the exchange.

“We’re a private (non-sectarian) agency and we liaise between the recipient and the donor,” explains Eileen Dover, executive director of Genesis Family Services in Holly Pond, Alabama.

Recipients send in a $100 application fee, list their requirements and are put on a waiting list until the right match pops up. The total agency cost to recipients is $1,800 but they’re also responsible for shipping, donor medical testing, notary feels, and a flat $250 attorney fee. Donors, who also can specify requirements for a receiving family, fill in a standard questionnaire, including medical history. Genesis’ simple-language but comprehensive contract requires adherence to the ASRM guidelines, but the agency leaves that to the donor’s doctor.

While Genesis doesn’t require psychological counseling, the contract calls for recipients to pay for up to three sessions for the donor, if the donor chooses. Dover also says, “we ask recipients to get counseling as well, but that’s their responsibility.”

Genesis advocates closed donations but will go with client’s wishes for open ones.

“We try to encourage transferring four embryos,” says Dover. “If you have 10 embryos (eggs that are fertilized, frozen but haven’t started dividing yet), you may get four to six that live through the thawing process. If they’re blastocysts (5-day-old embryos), there’s a darn good chance they’re going to do well and I don’t think any physician would do more than two or three.”

In Fullerton, California, Snowflakes operates on the assumption that this is an adoption. “In our program, we focus on the end result which is the child. That’s the same in all adoptions,” says JoAnn Eiman, a Snowflakes spokesperson.

The Christian faith-based agency requires recipient families undergo a homestudy, a fundamental process in traditional adoption, but controversial in embryo donation for transfer. As Eiman explains it, about 20% of the homestudy is about child abuse and Department of Justice background checks. “The other 80% is preparing the parent for a non-genetically linked child,” she says. The agency does both closed and open donations, depending on the preferences of the parties.

Snowflakes fees to recipients are about $4,000 for the matching, legal contract, shipping, coordination, rematching if required and lifetime support.

Begun in 1997, the first Snowflakes baby was born in 1998. In 1999 there were a couple of matches but no births. But by 2002 there were a total of 18 babies born and this year, Snowflakes expects another 23.

Do donors who’ve gone this far change their minds? “Most don’t but it happens,” said Eiman. “Typically when the donor couple gets a profile on the adoptive family they say ‘Oh my goodness, this is real. They’re going to take them and raise them.’ When they get the packet that’s when it hits them.”

It’s a whole new world, agrees Dover at Genesis. “It remains to be seen whether (donors) really get that they’re going to have children out there. They say, ‘Yes, I understand.’ But what’s going to happen 20 years down the road? I think about that when I’m whiting out the records and I think someday someone might want to look at that.”

When It’s All Too Confusing

Okay. We’re all pretty clear that the “what is to be done” with extra frozen embryos is at best confusing. The American Fertility Association strongly urges that you weigh the following to help ease the strain:

  1. Nobody has control over your embryos but you.
  2. You are not obligated to stick with your first decision or your second or third. The no-turning-back point comes only after you’ve formally and legally relinquished ownership of your embryos.
  3. Know that it is absolutely fine to wait as long as it takes for you to make the decision that feels right for you. No government, social or religious entity should force you into taking an action that, in your gut, you know is a personal mistake. Because you will have to live with this decision forever.
  4. Donating to other couples is a real and generous alternative. The AFA recommends you thoroughly explore the legal, psychological and emotional implications and potential long-term ramifications. You must feel confident that you can deal with the possible outcomes down the road.
  5. Thawing without intent to transfer is a perfectly reasonable option that most couples do choose, finding it provides the unexpected relief of closure. Yes, there may very well be grief and counseling or support that can serve you well.

We at The American Fertility Association will continue to report, write and provide you with as much information about this topic as we can. But, as one of the leading patient advocate groups, The AFA is always available to you, to answer questions, provide support and referrals. Please call our toll-free number (888) 917-3777. It always helps to talk with those who’ve been through it, too. "

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Donor Anonymity - What Do You Think?

I read this great blog post by Donor Concierge, and I was impressed by the woman's candor.  I wanted to share this with all of you as Gail has done and get your thoughts on the subject.  As I have also been a donor, I have no problems allowing the children to have contact with me in the future in order to discover who they.   I am not willing to have any relationship beyond that, but I am willing to share with them any information that may help them in their own journey through life.  What do you think?

"Egg Donation: Why I gave up my right to remain anonymous
By Laura Witjens, Chair of the National Gamete Donation Trust, egg donor and mother 08 June 2009

Following a change in the law that came into force on 1 April 2005, British people conceived using donated egg, sperm or embryos can ask for identifying information about the donor when they reach the age of 18. Here Laura Witjens, egg donor and mother of two, writes about why she elected to remove her anonymity and potentially become identifiable to any children born from her donation.

I'll never know what made me watch breakfast television that morning. Being a single working mother with two one-year olds, it was a luxury I could ill afford. But I did, and one of the items changed my life forever. The same day, I contacted a fertility clinic and told them I wanted to be an egg donor.

It was the year 2000 and discussions about the removal of anonymity from egg and sperm donors were only just taking place between patient groups and other fertility organisations. For me, at the time just a willing and partly-informed donor, the notion of being known to any resulting offspring wasn't even a blip on the radar. The counsellor who I saw at the clinic was satisfied I knew what I was doing and, other than the known medical ones, no other long-term implications were discussed. Some months later the deed was done: 13 healthy follicles were harvested and I left the clinic with the feeling I'd done something momentous. Just how momentous, I only found out years later.

Not satisfied with the information available, as well as certain parts of the process, I made another life changing step. I contacted the National Gamete Donation Trust (NGDT) and asked if I could volunteer. I became a Trustee and, motivated by the pending removal of anonymity and differences of opinion with other Trustees, I went on to become the Chair. It's a position I've held for the last six years and in this time I've taken part in many gamete donation discussions.

I firmly believe in leading by example, a philosophy I carry through to my work as a business woman and as Chair of the NGDT. So, with such an emotive subject, how could I lead an organisation without putting my money where my mouth was? If I truly believed in the identity of the donor being disclosed to the donor-conceived person, the legislation at the time of my donation shouldn't have been relevant to me. I knew that re-registering as a known donor with the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) might be futile, since the family created out of my donation would never realise that their donor was willing to be known. Still, it was a matter of principle for me, and one that required substantial soul searching.

I asked myself the many questions that many donors in my position might ask: Can I empathise so much with these people that I'm prepared to open my door, my life, my family at a time that suits them? At the same time, can I be distant enough and accept that whilst I am prepared to make important steps towards that person's wellbeing, I will never find out if indeed they are well? More importantly, how would my children deal with this? They had absolutely no say in my choice to become a donor, but it's known that many donor-conceived people are more curious about their half-siblings than their donor. In other words, it wouldn't be me they were after; they would want to meet my own 'flesh and blood' children.

Through the NGDT I had access to donor-conceived young adults, donor conception parents and various fertility professionals. But not surprisingly the act I was contemplating was, and to a large extent still is, uncharted territory. It seemed no one could help me find the answers I needed. As not just a donor but also heading the NGDT, I did not just want to accept it - I had to wholeheartedly support and embrace it.

My answers came through my children. By then my seven year old daughter and son were developing into individuals with their own quirks, traits and habits. I divorced their father when they were one and remarried when they were four. In other words, I have my own social experiment going on with twins fathered by one man, raised by another.

My children have taken on habits from both men. Unlike donor parents, however, I know where this comes from and can share that with them when appropriate. This may seem rather trivial from the outside, but I know from experience that it does matter to them.

I donated to help other people less fortunate than myself. I went through weeks of unpleasant injections and examinations, believing I was doing the right thing. 'Doing the right thing' has been my drive through all of this: being a donor, leading the NGDT, raising awareness. And now doing the right thing means giving the children I helped to conceive access to information about me.

I have since re-registered and am happy to make myself available to the child born out of my donation. If I can help to give them understanding about themselves I will gladly help. It may seem like a little thing, but I know from experience it could mean the world to them
."

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Erickson Law and Conceptual Options, a Center for Surrogacy & Egg Donation Announces European Conference on Surrogacy & Egg Donation

San Diego & Los Angeles, CA June 10, 2009 – Erickson Law, a boutique law firm specializing exclusively in third party reproduction, and The Surrogacy & Egg Donation Center at Conceptual Options, LLC announces their European Surrogacy & Egg Donation Conference to be held in Genève, Switzerland July 29-31, 2009.  “We realized there is a need in the European community for information on the process of Third Party Assisted Reproduction in the United States, which is why we are holding this conference to raise awareness throughout Europe.” states Theresa M. Erickson, Surrogacy Lawyer, CEO and founder of Conceptual Options. 

“A substantial portion of our clients are located outside of the United States and with the recent events in the fertility world, we felt that an information seminar to explain this process was in order.” states Surrogacy Lawyer Erickson.  

The Surrogacy & Egg Donation Conference is aimed at informing the European community on the possibilities that exist in the United States for family building.  The topics to be discussed include explaining the process of third party assisted reproduction, as well as helping alleviate the uncertainty of the journey, such as medical insurance issues, obtaining birth certificates and passports, citizenship issues, and taking your baby home.

The keynote speaker at this conference will be Surrogacy lawyer Theresa M. Erickson.  Ms Erickson is a globally recognized expert in this specialized area of law. Attorney Erickson is also involved in this community by volunteering her time for Resolve and AFA, while sponsoring events that promote awareness outside of this field.  She is also the author of Assisted Reproduction, the Complete Guide to Having a Baby with the Help of a Third Party. Her next book is currently being finalized for publication.

“The first step is to get your own thoughts in order,” states Michel Tournay the International Case Manager for Conceptual Options.  “If you are still unsure of how to proceed or where to look, ask questions, questions and more questions. We will show you what you need to build a team of professionals so you are not alone in your journey to building your family!” according to Tournay.

In fact, according to Tournay, “We understand your need for privacy and confidentiality, which is why this is a private informational conference.”   All information regarding attendees will be kept in the strictest of confidence to ensure you remain anonymous on all levels. 

For additional information on The European Conference on Surrogacy & Egg Donation please contact Michel Tournay at 001-858-748-4222 or visit our website.

About Conceptual Options, LLC & Surrogacy Lawyer Erickson

Conceptual Options was founded by Theresa M. Erickson, Esq. in 1999 and has been integral in all aspects of the fertility community and in helping build families through surrogacy, egg donation, embryo donation and sperm donation for couples and individuals across the United States and the World.  “All families are traditional; some just take alternative paths by using surrogacy, egg donation, embryo donation and sperm donation to become a family.”

 

Friday Legal Updates - CA Egg Donation Law, OK Restrictions, GA Embryo Law, Israel Surrogacy & Croatia Moves to New IVF Rules

TGIF to all once again.  We have quite a few updates on the legal front as far as IVF and the related technologies are concerned - again, I blame the entire Octo-Mom mess.  Regardless, some of the bills have a great purpose, so I am not going to complain.  Today we are starting in California and ending in Croatia, so enjoy the trip!

California - Assemblymember Marty Block of San Diego has proposed AB1317, which will require that all advertisements for egg donation include a warning informing patients that there are potential health risks involved and advises consulting with one's own physician.  Here is the current status of the bill for review on the California Legislative Website.

Oklahoma - The state enacts sex-selection, cloning bans.  The governor has signed into law banning sex selection abortions and human cloning.    The bills were signed in law May 21.

Georgia - Georgia will officially become the first state with an embryo adoption law when the law takes effect July 1, 2009.  The "Option of Adoption Act"  - "Embryo adoption allows the adopting mother to experience pregnancy and has been promoted by pro-lifers for years but, until now, has not been governed by the laws of any state. Significantly, the Georgia bill amends Georgia's adoption laws to make clear that embryo adoption in fact is a form of adoption. The law also allows adoptive parents to file in court for a final order of adoption (for the child who is born as the result of the embryo adoption), which supporters of the new law say clarifies that the adopting parents are eligible for claiming some but not all of their expenses for the federal adoption tax credit, which this year is more than $11,000.

Although embryo adoption tends to be cheaper than traditional adoption it nevertheless can still cost several thousands of dollars. "

Israel - Haredi widow to become a surrogate mother.  For the first time in Israel, an ultra-Othodox woman will serve as a surrogate mother, after receiving authorization to do so from a rabbi.  "the woman was concerned of her neighbors' reactions should she become pregnant, and asked the Institute of Fertility and Medicine According to Halacha to arrange a halachic approval from a rabbi explaining her condition and guaranteeing she was not "promiscuous."

Croatia - Croatia moves to adopt long awaited IVF law.  "According to the draft law to be forwarded to parliament within the next 10 days, infertility treatment would be allowed for married women only, a term that Milinovic labelled as "conservative."

At the same time, the legislation contains "liberal" provisions allowing egg and sperm donations, the minister added.

Under the new law, a child conceived by a donated egg or sperm would be able to obtain information about his or her biological parents once turning 18.

Such a provision was already condemned by local parents organisation RODA, which warned it could discourage potential donors.

Croatia's current law on medically assisted reproduction dates back to 1978, when the world's first "test-tube baby" was born. The former Yugoslav republic had its first IVF baby five years later.

A new bill had been in the offing since the late 1990s but never reached parliament.

Many believe this was due to strong opposition from the Roman Catholic Church which sparked a vivid public debate in 2005 when it condemned IVF as a "crime against human life."

Medical sources estimate between 2,000 and 3,000 Croatian women suffer from infertility and are potential candidates for IVF treatment."

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Friday Legal Updates - Surrogate Insurance, Colorado Legislation, Georgia Embryo Adoption Bill, Lost Embryos & Surrogacy

Happy Memorial Day Weekend to all Americans - whether here or overseas!  I plan on taking off early today and spending Monday at home with my family. 

Well, here are this week's legal updates.  Enjoy!

Los Angeles, CA - New Life Agency Continues to Trial Against Beitler Services in Pursuit of Payments fro Surrogate Maternity Claims - Press Release Here

Colorado - Colorado Gay Couples Ok'd to Adopt - new legislation allows joint adoption of children by unmarried couples.  Colorado is now the 10th state in the country to allow such second parent adoptions.

Georgia -The governor has signed and passed the nation's first embryo adoption bill on May 18th.  What do you think of this law and how it will affect those opting for embryo adoption/donation?  What about the additional costs?

Massachusetts - Quincy Couple sue Boston Hospital over destroyed embryos - oops!  This is not good. 

"Destruction of the embryos amounts to gross negligence on the part of Brigham and Women’s Hospital and several members of its staff, the suit filed Thursday in Norfolk County Superior Court contends.

In a statement, the hospital said: ‘‘We are deeply sorry; we informed the couple as soon as we became aware and have apologized to our patient and her husband. We hold ourselves responsible for not ensuring the proper care of our patient’s embryos. We are improving our policies and procedures, adding an increased level of oversight to prevent this from happening again.’’

Julie Norton was diagnosed with rectal-colon cancer in 2001 at age 29, less than a year after the couple married.

The Nortons were told that the surgery and radiation and chemotherapy treatments Julie Norton had to undergo would greatly diminish her ability to have children, according to the suit.

The Nortons consulted with Dr. Elizabeth Ginsburg, the director of the hospital’s in vitro fertilization and assisted reproductive technology programs, and decided to harvest some of Norton’s eggs and cryo-preserve them after they were fertilized. "

Queensland, AU - Altruistic Surrogacy to be decriminalized - this is a move to make it easier for gay and lesbian couples to become parents. 

Friday Legal Updates - Embryos, Surrogacy, & Reproductive Tourism Revisited-

Happy Friday to one and all!  I am excited about spending a weekend in Los Angeles.  There have been some interesting articles posted over the last week from over the world.  Read and give me your thoughts.  Have a great weekend to all.

Montana - Lesbian Custody Case - Another case of "you are not the parent" explained in detail by Julie Shapiro, who has a great blog with alot of information on many legal issues.  Of course, one of the women did not adopt the children, which would likely not be allowed in Montana, and the other woman wants full custody.  It is another unfortunate case that is even bringing in the Alliance Defense Fund, who opposes gay/lesbian rights.  So, go figure.  It is before the Montana Supreme Court, so we will keep an eye on this one. 

National - Single Embryo Transfer: Why Not Put All Your Eggs in One Basket?  Great article by Dr. Petok via the American Fertility Association.  A great response to the Octomom debacle and the move towards fewer embryos being transferred. 

Australia - Incubated Embryos Destroyed after Sydney IVF Malfunction.   This is a sad situation - I certainly hope that the end result is good for all of these patients. 

Ireland - Irish Couples Face an Uphill Struggle with Surrogacy Laws.  Surrogacy at home in Ireland is almost impossible, even though there are no laws banning such practices.  There is an adoption required, which makes this possibility virtually impossible unless it involves a family member.  And, with changes in the law in the UK in 2005, that country is no longer an option as it was in the past. 

Singapore - Singapore is now allowing reimbursement for altruistic living organ donations.  The regulations and requirements will ultimately fall in the hands of the medical ethics boards in order to determine who is a healthy donor and who is acting altruistically.  The Health Ministry now also has a plan in place as to how this will be done.  Is this a step in the right direction?  What do you think? 

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Follow Up to Why Not Adopt & the Vulnerability of Surrogacy Patients

Just wanted to give another great resource to those who are dealing with the issue of "Why Not Just Adopt."  Please listen to Dawn's radio blog post found here:

Listen to Creating a Family: Talk About Infertility and Adoption

Now, onto another issue that keeps coming up, which is called the "Surrogacy Racket."   Two articles were just posted today regarding the vulnerability of patients/clients and how they can be taken advantage of in so many ways.  My point is to be patient and educate yourself completely before you jump into any sort of journey, especially when it comes to creating your family - whether it be adoption, IVF, egg/sperm donation and/or surrogacy.

Here is a portion of one of the articles:

"It’s­ am­az­ing­l­y eas­y to­ fo­o­l­ infertil­e c­o­up­l­es­ - es­p­ec­ial­l­y tho­s­e w­ho­ are
d­esper­a­t­e , a­nd­ a­r­e clut­ch­ing a­t­ st­r­a­ws
. A­n excellent­ exa­m­ple is wh­a­t­ so­m­e IV­F clinics in Ind­ia­ wh­o­ o­ffer­ sur­r­o­ga­cy d­o­.

Even­­ t­hough t­hese cl­i­n­­i­cs kn­­ow t­ha­t­ t­here i­s n­­o l­ega­l­ met­hod of­ a­l­l­owi­n­­g t­he coupl­e t­o t­a­ke t­he ba­by­ a­f­t­er bi­rt­h wi­t­h t­hem out­ of­ I­n­­di­a­ ( beca­use I­n­­di­a­n­­ l­a­w on­­l­y­ recogn­­i­ses t­he bi­rt­h mot­her, whose n­­a­me must­ go on­­ t­he chi­l­d’s bi­rt­h cert­i­f­i­ca­t­e, whi­ch i­s a­ l­ega­l­ documen­­t­), t­hey­ use t­he ga­rb of­ t­he ” I­CMR gui­del­i­n­­es” ( whi­ch ha­ve n­­o l­ega­l­ va­l­i­di­t­y­ wha­t­soever) t­o put­ t­he i­n­­t­en­­ded pa­ren­­t­’s ( t­he i­n­­f­ert­i­l­e coupl­e’s) n­­a­me on­­ t­he chi­l­d’s bi­rt­h cert­i­f­i­ca­t­e. Whi­l­e on­­e ma­y­ just­i­f­y­ doi­n­­g t­hi­s f­or va­ri­ous rea­son­­s, t­he f­a­ct­ rema­i­n­­s t­ha­t­ t­he t­rut­h i­s bei­n­­g di­st­ort­ed out­ of­ sha­pe - a­n­­d on­­ce y­ou a­re wi­l­l­i­n­­g t­o do t­hi­s, i­t­’s very­ ea­sy­ t­o con­­t­i­n­­ue t­he di­st­ort­i­on­­ even­­ f­urt­her. T­hi­s i­s why­ t­hese cl­i­n­­i­cs ref­use t­o a­l­l­ow t­he surroga­t­e t­o gi­ve i­n­­t­ervi­ews t­o t­he medi­a­ ."

But, remember, that this applies to surrogacy in any area - India, Ukraine, or even the United States.  Also, look at the Stirrup Queens Blog, which has a great post today on emotional fraud, which I think also applies. 

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Why Don't You Just Adopt? Why even consider Surrogacy, Egg Donation, or IVF?

I have been reading alot of blogging regarding this question of "why not just adopt?", inlcuding several articles in well-known magazines questioning why anyone would choose surrogacy, egg donation or IVF over adoption.  But, we all know that it is not that simple.  And, what I really want people to do is think before you ask such questions.  Take your own life experience and personalisms out of the equation - instead, spend a moment to "walk in their shoes."  Literally. 

I suggest that you read "So You're Infertile, Why Not Just Adopt?" by Dawn Davenport.  I also suggest STRONGLY that you also read all of the comments listed by her participants.  Very enlightening, and it may help you when you are speaking to others about your journey.

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Friday Legal Updates - North Carolina Surrogacy, China Surrogacy, Ethics & Egg Donation, Embryo Legislation, & Fertility Tourism

Happy Friday to everyone.  We have alot of information for today's updates so let me know your thoughts and experiences.

North Carolina - This information was sent to me by a colleague in the field, and I felt that the information was essential to pass on for review and/or action. 

THIS BILL WILL BE HEARD IN THE HOUSE HEALTH COMMITTEE ON TUESDAY, MAY 6TH AT 12 NOON.

 

I am writing to those individuals who I think might have an interest in the status of HB 510.  The sponsor of the bill graciously invited me to participate in a meeting regarding this bill with the judge and Institute of Govt. person who were instrumental in the drafting of this bill.

 

The intent of the drafters are to allow surrogacy agreements in NC which is a good thing.  However, they are taking the position that people should be grateful they are doing this and be willing to accept the limitations that are imposed by the bill.  In one sense, the bottom line is that this bill will help those who have the least problem getting pre-birth orders, i.e. married couples who use IVF and are genetically related to the child to be born.  Other individuals - such as unmarried couples and those who don’t know or can’t afford to follow the procedure - will probably not be able to get pre-birth orders.

 

MOST SIGNIFICANT ASPECT OF BILL: PARTIES TO AN AGREEMENT MUST GO TO COURT PRIOR TO EVEN PREGNANCY TO GET JUDICIAL APPROVAL OF THEIR AGREEMENT.  IF THEY DO NOT, THEY WILL NOT BE ABLE TO GET A PRE-BIRTH ORDER

 

OTHER ASPECTS OF BILL THAT MAY BE OF CONCERN:

 

1.            52D-1(1) - must do procedure through doctor - no self-insemination.

2.            52D-1(3) - surrogate must have already had a child.

 

3.            52D-1(6) - if married, both spouses must be Intended Parents.

 

4.      52D-2(d) - requires judicial preapproval of surrogacy agreement (SA) even before gestational carrier (GC) becomes pregnant.

 

5.       52D-5 - requires notice to court if agreement terminated before pregnancy and serve on all parties.

 

6.         52D-4(a) - requires hearing and testimony from each party.

 

7.         52D-4(a)(2) - requires all parties to consult with attorney.

 

8.         52D-8(a) - limits enforceable SA to only those done pre-pregnancy.

 

9.         52D-8(b)-= makes GC mother if agreement is not validated

 

10.       52D-8(c) - if no validated SA, IP is not legal parent but is held liable for child support to GC.

 

MAJOR POSITIVE ASPECT OF BILL: Will give court authority to enter order declaring a non-genetic intended parent as a legal parent who can go on the birth certificate.  Currently, it has been difficult, if not impossible, to get a court to enter a pre-birth order for a non-genetic parent (such as when embryo is created from anonymous egg donor and husband’s sperm).

 

I am not sure if in the end this bill will be helpful or limiting.  The bill certainly has a long way to go before it becomes law.  This memo is to provide you information so if any of you want to be involved with what happens to this bill, you will have the information you need.

 

You can get a copy of the bill at: http://www.ncleg.netwww.ncleg.net/Sessions/2009/Bills/House/PDF/H510v1.pdf.

Missouri - Life-Related Bills Linger in State

"A bill in the Missouri House, HB810, sponsored by Rep. Robert Schaaf, R-St. Joseph, would limit the number of embryos a physician can implant during an in vitro fertilization procedure. Limits would be based on the current number recommended by the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, which ranges from one to five, depending on a woman’s age.

As of Review press time, the House Healthcare Transformation committee had passed the bill, but it had not moved to the House floor.

Deacon Weber said the MCC opposes the bill, noting that if it is made into law, legislators are “giving the blessing of the state for doing this unethical procedure.” If passed, it would be the first law in the state that addresses the in vitro procedure, he added.

Several other Catholic leaders in the archdiocese said that the bill should serve as an opportunity for the Church to reiterate her teachings on creating human life by artificial means.  

Even if the number of implanted embryos is reduced according to American Society for Reproductive Medicine guidelines, in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer still constitutes “taking the creation of new life out context, which is supposed to be within the loving relationship of a husband and wife,” said Father Donald Henke, assistant professor of moral theology at Kenrick-Glennon Seminary. "

Nationwide - Taking a Stand for Ethical Donor Agencies 

"We understand that many of these young women looking into egg donation are motivated by the compensation, but that should never override good sense. Here are a few questions they should ask their agency upfront in the interests of ensuring informed consent.

  • What are the health risks, specifically and statistically?
  • How many donation cycles do you allow?
  • What’s your level of experience, based on total donor cycles completed?
  • Do you provide qualified legal representation for donors?
  • Do you provide insurance in the event of medical complications?
  • What does your donor screening process entail?
  • Can I talk to your current and past egg donors?

As the fertility industry grows, it’s up to us to make sure we’re meeting the highest standards of practices and behaviors, and follow guidelines established by the American Society for Reproductive Medicine. ARR developed a code of ethics to help protect our donors, surrogates and intended parents through this process.   However, donors must remember that it’s their bodies and no one is as deeply vested in their health as they are."

International - Couples Turn to Overseas Support in Quest for Family

As I tend to be very risk adverse, I found this article to be a cautionary tale for everyone who wants to save costs while accepting more risk.

As the author states, "They need to think about the minefield of the current law before, not after they enter into what the judge described as their “entirely innocent voyage of discovery”

My final point is that the judge made it clear he could not imagine why a parental order would ever be refused by the Court in the interests of a child’s welfare. He thought the last real opportunity to consider the commerciality of the surrogacy arrangement, and grant or deny temporary leave for a child to enter the country, would be by the immigration authorities."

China - Crackdown on Surrogate Mother Industry

"Surrogate mothers are more in demand than ever in China, as wealthy infertile couples look to others to bear them babies. Officials have largely turned a blind eye to this underground womb-for-rent industry that defies the country's strict childbirth laws. But now, there are signs the authorities are starting to crack down by forcing some surrogate mothers to have abortions....

Underground networks of surrogacy agents, hospitals, and doctors have spread in recent years as infertile Chinese couples with money hire surrogates to produce babies for them. The surrogates are often confined to secret flats for most of their pregnancy to avoid detection, while fertility, obstetrics and childbirth procedures for the mothers are often carried out discreetly by medical staff at public hospitals and health clinics with links to agents. With around one in six couples in the US now estimated to be infertile and with similar rates in China, surrogacy agencies have been recruiting girls, often from poor villages, to have babies on behalf of prospective parents, in ever greater numbers"

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Law triggers IVF tourism in Germany

Found a great article on fertility tourism and how the restrictions on IVF are affecting infertile couples and individuals in Germany.  I like for us to consider this with  all of the current media attention on IVF, thanks to the Octomom, so that we tread lightly and not go too far as seems to be happening here. 

Please let me know your thoughts. 

"Women over 60 are becoming mothers, and parents can choose if they want a boy or a girl – all thanks to the wonders of modern medicine. But, such help is not available to couples in Germany.   

Instead, there are strict rules governing fertility treatment, which some believe are too restrictive on prospective parents.

Thomas Bartels and Birgit Brand have been trying to have a baby for 5 years. With no success naturally, they are now on their third IVF (In Vitro Fertilization) treatment, and they are hoping it will be the last. They say they are content with the fertility system in Germany at the moment, but with more options available abroad, such as egg donation and selection, they might be tempted to leave in the near future.

“It’s hard to say today what we will do, how much patience, how much strength do we have, how many attempts do we want to make, especially if it fails this time. And if so, then we will have to really think about whether we will go abroad to have a better chance of getting pregnant,” says Thomas Barlets."

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Law triggers IVF tourism in Germany

Found a great article on fertility tourism and how the restrictions on IVF are affecting infertile couples and individuals in Germany.  I like for us to consider this with  all of the current media attention on IVF, thanks to the Octomom, so that we tread lightly and not go too far as seems to be happening here. 

Please let me know your thoughts. 

"Women over 60 are becoming mothers, and parents can choose if they want a boy or a girl – all thanks to the wonders of modern medicine. But, such help is not available to couples in Germany.   

Instead, there are strict rules governing fertility treatment, which some believe are too restrictive on prospective parents.

Thomas Bartels and Birgit Brand have been trying to have a baby for 5 years. With no success naturally, they are now on their third IVF (In Vitro Fertilization) treatment, and they are hoping it will be the last. They say they are content with the fertility system in Germany at the moment, but with more options available abroad, such as egg donation and selection, they might be tempted to leave in the near future.

“It’s hard to say today what we will do, how much patience, how much strength do we have, how many attempts do we want to make, especially if it fails this time. And if so, then we will have to really think about whether we will go abroad to have a better chance of getting pregnant,” says Thomas Barlets."

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FRIDAY LEGAL UPDATES - India Surrogacy, Embryos & Divorce, New York & Same Sex Marriages

TGIF, everyone!  Well, not much on the legal front this week that is new news, but here are a few items that I think are newsworthy.  Have a great weekend!

New York - Governor Patterson of New York announced plans that he is set to introduce same-sex marriage legislation into the State Assembly

If the legislation passes, it would make New York the fifth state to legalize same sex-marriage. Similar measures have been approved by courts or lawmakers in Connecticut, Vermont, Massachusetts and Iowa.

"We hope to have this bill passed at the end of June, at the end of the legislative session," said Kellner. "No one wants to bring this to the floor to fail, it would be a huge disaster. We want to make sure that if we bring this to the floor for a vote that it passes."

Nationwide - What Happens to Embryos When a Marriage Dissolves? 

One of the principal legal issues of ART, at the moment, regards the disposition of embryos and whether a couple that uses assisted reproductive technologies should be governed by the laws of contract or by the right to procreate. More specifically, when the couple decides to divorce and cannot agree on the disposition of the embryos that they created through ART, the following questions must be asked: who should have the right to procreate and who should not? Should the couple’s informed consent contract, which was signed before the creation of the embryos, trump the rights of the parties individually after the embryos are already in existence?

India - As I am continually being asked about surrogacy in India and I continue to hear of cases that are not working out as planned, I want to make certain that I provide those couples with the information that I have available.  I am not against surrogacy in India, I merely want to make certain that everyone makes their decision with their eyes wide open. 

Surrogacy & Child Rights

Right of Foreign Homosexuals to Have a Surrogate Child in India: An Analysis

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Friday Legal Updates - Sperm, Gay Marriage, Adoption Reversal, Italy & IVF

Can you believe that it is Friday already?  TGIF!  Some new developments on the legal landcape regarding IVF, adoption, sperm, equality, etc.  There is also a link to updates on Surrogenesis for those interested in keeping updated. 

Vermont – Vermont legalizes Gay marriage after voting to override the Governor’s veto, making it the first state to do so through legislation...

Indiana – The Indiana Supreme Court makes a controversial reversal…could your surrogacy borne child be next?

Texas – Mother says son would have wanted her to harvest his sperm…what are your thoughts?

United States – Sperm and the law…could your sperm bank be liable?

Tennessee – Following Equality Bills around the country.

Georgia – Embryo donation is already legal; this decision could make the adoption of these embryos also legal in the state.

Italy – Top court slightly relaxes their previously strict regulations on artificial procreation…not as relaxed as the media would have you believe.  

Surrogenesis Updates - http://www.eggdonor.com/blog/

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Triplet and Higher Order Multiple Births from ART Are Below Two Percent

According to a press release sent out by ASRM, Triplet and Higher Order Multiple Births from ART Are Below Two Percent.  Further the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology Releases Data from 2007 Clinic Outcome Reports.   The information is as follows:

"Washington, DC – The latest IVF Success Rate Reports from the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology (SART) are now on-line. The 2007 data show several important on-going trends: the percentage of live births with triplets or more is now below 2%; the average number of embryos transferred has declined; and the percentages of cycles utilizing single embryo transfer is up.

SART President, Elizabeth Ginsburg, MD, commented, “Our latest numbers show our progress in decreasing the incidence of multiple pregnancies. In 2007, 1.8% of live births to patients under 35 were triplets or more; this is down from 6.4% in 2003. As our members continue their efforts in implementing ASRM-SART guidelines, we should see future improvements in patient care and outcomes.”

For 2007, 358 clinics reported data to SART on 132,745 treatment cycles, 40,050 of which resulted in the birth of 53,050 babies. "

For the SART Results, patients can click on the yellow box, “IVF Success Rate Reports,” to search for SART member clinics in their area and view the clinics’ individual data. Each clinic’s report allows access to yearly data from 2003 through 2007 and details procedures the clinic offers with corresponding success rates. Prospective patients can use the site’s features to view clinic data organized according to the treatment types and diagnoses most relevant to them and with a click, can send a request for additional information.

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IVF & Surrogacy in India - an Update

With fertility tourism on the rise, as we all know, I like to keep you informed of perspectives that come across my desk so that you can decide how to proceed with your eyes wide open.  Specifically, how does one handle that there are no laws that regulate IVF and surrogacy in India?  Does that concern you?  Or, are you willing to overlook these issues to have a baby?  I would like to hear your thoughts on this author's perspective:

"There is no doubt that IVF technology represents one of modern medicine’s success stories. Using IVF , we can help couples who could never have a baby with any other technique to start their own family.

However, woe betide the patient who ends up in a bad IVF clinic ! For example , one of the IVF clinics in New Delhi is owned by a skin specialist. This doctor, who is not even a gynecologist , offers IVF treatment ! Not only are your chances of getting pregnant in a bad IVF clinic very low, you also run a major risk of losing a lot of time, money and energy. Not only do you pour your money down the drain, you also end up losing confidence in IVF technology, thus depriving yourself of your best chance of having a baby . And when you do find out afterwards that the IVF clinic you selected was a bad one, there is little you can do about it ! Blaming yourself or cursing the doctor afterwards does not help, which is why you need to be very careful when deciding which clinic in which to do your treatment ! Caveat emptor - and this is why it's very important that you do your homework carefully - you are making a major investment !"

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FRIDAY LEGAL UPDATES - Gay Rights, Fertility, Embryos, Georgia Legislation, Surrogacy & India

Today's updates are short but sweet, as I am swamped today!

Here they are in shortened form:

Connecticut - The State lawmakers are considering updating state law to conform with a court ruling that allows that allows same-sex marriages, opponents of gay marriage fear their effort will go too far to promote homosexuality.

Massachusetts - A former Massachusetts woman has pleaded guilty to mail fraud and other charges for selling fertility drugs on the internet

Georgia - Update: Success as Georgia Legislation SB 169 is stripped of prohibition on cryopreservation of embryos.

Israel - Israel grants work leave for a gay man for the birth of his son via a surrogate.

New Zealand - Separated couple in dispute over frozen embryos that they created together in 2000.  No children have resulted from the other embryos; however, the woman wants to try again, despite the fact that they are separated.  The male partner will not permit her to use them or to donate them to another couple.  

India - Regulators are now pushing surrogacy legislation as the business continues to grow daily

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Woman's cryopreserved egg results in healthy baby

As an advocate for being proactive with one's fertility (ie. AFA's Manicure and Martinis), and in fact, having a daughter who is currently completing her egg freezing cycle, it is good to hear stories such as this published by Reuters on this woman's cryopreserved egg resulting in a live birth

"NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A way of preserving the chances of having a child for women and girls facing cancer treatment that will leave them infertile has been demonstrated to work, for the first time.

 

Specialists at McGill University in Montreal have developed a protocol in which they retrieve immature eggs (i.e., "oocytes") from a woman's ovaries, induce the oocytes to mature in a lab dish, then deep-freeze them; the oocytes can then be thawed for fertilization at a future point.

 

This strategy avoids the rise in estrogen that is necessary for normal ovulation but which can be detrimental for cancer patients, and doesn't require cancer treatment to be delayed.

....

Subsequently, four eggs survived when they were thawed 2 months later. Three were fertilized by injection of a single sperm, and transferred to the patient's womb 2 days later.

 

At 39 weeks gestation, the patient delivered a healthy 7.5-pound baby girl. "Examination of the newborn by a pediatrician found no evidence of congenital malformations, and the child has continued to develop normally," Dr. Tan's team reports."

 Source: Fertility and Sterility February 2009

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Research Your Surrogacy & Egg Donation Agency

The American Fertility Association put out an information page that it both timely and important for those Intended Parents, Surrogates and Egg Donors researching which agency they should work with in order to create a family for themselves or for their Intended Parents. 

The AFA wants to remind people to "look before they leap," which I follow up with "Buyer Beware."

They posed the following questions for review, which I recommend to every potential client that contacts myself or Conceptual Options.

"You can never ask too many questions

1.  How long has the agency been in business?
2.  How many cases has it handled?
3.  What is the screening process for agency surrogates?
4.  Does the screening process include background checks and verification of information on the donor/surrogate?
5.  What part of the screening process is covered by the agency and what part is charged to the recipients?
6.  Has the agency been involved in any lawsuits?
7.  How accurate are its cost estimates?
8.  Does the agency provide a list of all fees upfront?
9.  When are payments required and what part of the payment is refundable?
10. What type of health insurance is used for agency surrogates? Can they provide proof from the insurance company that surrogacy maternity care is included/not excluded?
11. How many staff members does the agency have and what is the staff to client ratio?
12. Does it carry adequate business insurance for protection against lawsuits?
13. How does the agency manage the financial aspects of its cases and are there fees for these services?

Important Tips

• Get everything in writing.
• Consider unexpected expenses like donor withdrawal, cancelled donor, and failed donor evaluation by IVF program.
• Before putting money down, check and re‐check to ensure donor will be available within the requested time frame. Make sure IVF program is available to screen and cycle in timeframe.
• Hire an attorney, independent from the agency, to review and make changes to the contracts, which understandably will be written by the agency and in favor of the agency.
• Ask for and review contracts up front, as opposed to waiting and being rushed through.
• Know that agency costs range from $5,000 to $60,000 and above. Be realistic about how much you are able to afford, as feeling desperate often results in poor choice."

The AFA also has an online education module that I prepared for them on selecting an agency.

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FRIDAY LEGAL UPDATES - Georgia, Quebec, UK & Missouri

It seems like I have been doing legal updates all week with the Georgia embryo legislation.  However, I do have some updates on that state, as well as a few others.  Let me know your thoughts on each one, as I think that the evolution of this field is rapidly progressing, and we all need a voice.

Georgia - HB 388 passed the House and is on its way to the Senate.  It is essentially creating an embryo adoption format for the donation of embryos to others.  As for SB169, many revisions have been made, and we will have to see where it goes.  Resolve made the following update via their site:

"UPDATE:  The Georgia Senate passed a revised SB 169 bill today, and the bill will now move to the Georgia House.  Earlier today the Senate voted to table SB 169 which essentially took the bill out of further consideration by the Senate during this legislative session.  During a break in the Senate chamber, the bill was revised once again and re-introduced.   It was then voted on and passed 34 to 22.  RESOLVE and its partners are now studying the revised SB 169 to determine the affect on infertility patients in Georgia.  Once we have given the bill careful review, RESOLVE will provide a full analysis and what the next steps should be. 

THANK YOU to the thousands of people around the country that cared about this issue.  Georgia residents responded to our call to action with passion.   NEARLY 100,000 letters, faxes, and emails were sent to Georgia Senators, BY Georgia residents, in the past 9 days.    Hundreds of phone calls were made, and the infertility community in Georgia showed up when it mattered.  We thank each and every one of you for what you have done.  You have inspired the entire country with your activism.    You are an inspiration.  You have shown us that our voice matters and our voice will be heard."

Missouri - As in Georgia, the legislature in Missouri is pushing to restrict stem cell research.  In SB 3219, lawmakers are trying to make certain that research in not done on human embryos in their state.  The bill comes in response to the President's lifting of restrictions on stem cell research. 

Quebec - Born to Surrogate, Child has No Legal Mother, Quebec Judge Rules

A Quebec woman has no legal right to the child she paid a surrogate mother to carry for her, a judge has ruled, leaving the child without a legal mother.  The judge made this decision based on the fact that the husband's sperm had been used to fertilize the surrogate's egg - leaving the husband with the only claim to the child.  In addition, surrogacy is illegal in Quebec. 

UK - Government intends to prevent donor-egg children from contacting half siblings until they are 18 

Strict rules proposed by the Government's fertility clinic watchdog is causing quite a stir from patient groups.  It appears that couples have been doing this for some time, and HFEA wants to close a loophole. 

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Georgia Embryo Legislation Update - It's Not Over Yet!

Rules Committee passes SB 169 - heads to a full Senate vote TODAY!  According to Resolve, they have issued the following statement:

 

Georgia Bill to restrict IVF patients goes to Senate vote.
Add Your Voice to Stop This Bill This Week!

UPDATE: On Wednesday, March 11 the Georgia Senate Rules Committee passed SB 169, sending it to the full Senate for a vote.  The vote will take place sometime Thursday, March 12. There will be no testimony from the public allowed. 

GA RESIDENTS we URGE you to act today, March 12:
1.  Continue to call, write and fax every Georgia Senator. If you already sent a letter, send another one! To send a NEW letter to every Senator, click here.
2.  Call every Senator and tell them "I oppose SB 169".  For a list of Senators, follow this link, then click on each Senator's name to find their office phone number.  http://www.legis.ga.gov/legis/2009_10/senate/senatelist.php
3.  Come to the Capitol!  We urge you to come today, March 12 between 10:00 AM and 7:00 PM. Come to the 3rd floor and you will receive further instructions.  Click here for more details about how to prepare.

In addition, according to AJC, the House has passed the following bill:

"The state House on Thursday passed a bill that could make Georgia the first state in nation to provide adoption of human embryos.

House Bill 388 passed in a 96 to 66 vote that fell mostly, but not entirely along party lines. Most Republicans voted for it, most Democrats voted against.

State Rep. James Mills (R-Gainesville), the bill’s author, presented the Option to Adoption Act as a safeguard against mothers who agree carry the fetuses of infertile couples from refusing to give up the infants after birth.

Some opponents characterized the bill as a back door attempt to outlaw abortion.

One conservative Republican, state Rep. Bobby Franklin (R-Marietta) argued that the bill amounts “to openly trafficking (embryonic) humans to the adoption market.”

But state Rep. Mike Jacobs (R-Dunwoody), a co-sponsor, disputed both arguments.

“There is no hidden agenda here,” said Jacobs. “This is a good pro-family bill.”

What are your thoughts on this legislation in Georgia obviously in response to the "Octomom?"
 

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Budgeting for Infertility - New Resource for Everyone

Now is the time for this book.  Please check out Budgeting for Infertility: Bringing Home Baby Without Breaking the Bank" at

http://www.amazon.com/Budgeting-Infertility-Bring-Without-Breaking/dp/1416566589/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1236794739&sr=1-1

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Georgia Bill Requiring Oversight on IVF Likely Dead Until Next Year

According to Medical News Today and National Partnership, it looks as if the Georgia bill (SB169) is “dead” until next year.  We had all suspected that this would happen, but again, we need to remain vigilant, as they may try and slip it through next year. 

This Georgia bill was the first attempt in the US to restrict the number of embryos implanted into a woman following IVF, and is now being following by Missouri.  Critics, such as Resolve and AFA, feel that the bills will produce devastating effects on those who want to have children but cannot without the help of IVF.

I am certain that this topic will be greatly debated at ASRM this year, and I look forward to being a part of that.  I would also like to know what your thoughts on this are and how you can help this sort of “reactive” legislation from being enacted in your own state?

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ACTION IS NEEDED! Georgia Embryo Bills Aims to Restrict IVF& Embryo Donation

Well, I hate to say it but the Octomom did it again.  Georgia legislators have now moved to do the following:

"One bill would limit the number of eggs that could be fertilized to three, and only that number could be implanted in the woman. The other bill creates a legal mechanism for the adoption of embryos."  In fact, this situation would place an unwanted burden on those wishing to go through embryo donation, including court proceedings, home studies, etc. 

Sen. Ralph Hudgens, R-Hull, introduced Senate Bill 169 to prevent a situation in Georgia in which an unemployed woman gives birth to eight babies."

Both bills are being proposed in order to ring in the excessed of the fertility industry; however, others think it is a way to restrict abortions. 

Embryo Bills Looks at Legal Limitations

Information that I just received is that it has passed Committee, and it is on its way to the Senate, where it is expected to pass.

I am including information from Resolve below for more ways to get involved!

Continue Reading...

When Parents Seek the Siblings of their Biologically Related Children

Science Daily  posted a great article today that is food for thought for all of us in this field, as well as those participants in third party reproduction, whether it is the sperm donor, the egg donor, the embryo donor, the parents or the children themselves. 

It appears that the research points to a positive end result, but judge for yourselves.

"The study in Europe's leading reproductive medicine journal Human Reproduction, found that parents set out to find their children's donor and other donor siblings through feelings of curiosity and a desire to enhance their children's sense of identity, and without expecting any very close contact. However, once they had identified the donor and their children's donor siblings, they not only found the experiences of contacting and meeting the donor siblings very positive, but in many cases formed close and continuing bonds."

The article continues, "One of these papers is an editorial commentary by Dr Pim Janssens, an associate editor of Human Reproduction. Writing about Dr Freeman's study, he says: 'Overall, these findings suggest that knowledge of donor sibling families is a good thing, and that disclosure of the donor identity makes sense, and need not be a problem. They also suggest that for many parents and children, having only information about donors is not satisfactory – real encounters are the ultimate desire. Unexpectedly these findings might also lead us to question the importance of a common family history for the creation of 'family feeling'. After all, none of the donor families calling their donor sibling relatives shared anything but genes. Nonetheless, many said they felt intuitively bonded.'

Click Here for the Complete Article

Theresa M. Erickson, Esq.
Surrogacy Lawyer & Egg Donation Lawyer 
www.EricksonLaw.net

Subscribe to my blog at: http://www.surrogacyeggdonorblog.com/subscribe.html

Multiple Births via IVF and the Octuplet Mess that is Increasing Scrutiny of the Industry

The octuplet "mess" will just not want to go away, especially now with a sperm donor claiming to be involved in the mix as shown on Good Morning America.

However, there were several articles over the last few days that I think will help everyone take a look at the real costs of multiples births, as well as how this one case may end up forcing the industry to take a good look at itself. 

The first one is through the New York Times, and it takes a hard look at the fertility industry.  They think that the octuplets' birth is a real wake up call:

"The American Society for Reproductive Medicine, the association of fertility doctors, even adopted guidelines in 2008 encouraging the transfer of only one embryo for women under 35, and no more than two, except in extraordinary circumstances. The guidelines allow more for older women, up to a maximum of five.

But unlike some other countries, the United States has no laws to enforce those guidelines. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has a surveillance system that collects data on fertility clinics, but reporting is voluntary and there are no government sanctions for not reporting.

As a result, experts say many doctors are still implanting too many embryos to increase the chance of pregnancy. Only 11 percent of in vitro procedures in the United States involve single embryos, according to 2006 data from the C.D.C."

Click Here for the Complete Article

Furthermore, in Newsweek, an article by Dr. Mark Evans talks about the other side of multiple births - selective reduction.  He states the following:

"When I first heard that a California woman had given birth to octuplets after undergoing in vitro fertilization, I couldn't believe it. As the details of Nadia Suleman's story emerged, it became only more incredible. As it turned out, a clinic transferred six embryos (two of which later split into identical twins) to Suleman, who had six children already, meaning she was extremely fertile. I have nothing against IVF. More than 2 million women worldwide have children because of it. But with the increase in fertility treatments, the U.S. birthrate of twins has more than doubled in the past 30 years. Overlooked in the happy news, though, are the troubling surges in neonatal deaths, developmental disabilities and other long-term problems.

For those reasons, doctors prefer to avoid multiple births. But with each cycle of IVF costing more than $10,000, there's enormous pressure to get patients pregnant—fast. Guidelines of the American Society of Reproductive Medicine and the Society of Assisted Reproductive Technologies say that in women under 35, usually only one or two embryos should be transferred to the uterus in any cycle. The U.S. average is 2.4. A third of such pregnancies result in twins, and 4.3 percent yield triplets or more. In women over 35, the overall pregnancy rate falls dramatically, and the proportion of multiples goes up."

He goes on to talk about the criticism that he receives regarding selective reduction as a solution in some cases:

"Of course, selective reduction can be an agonizing decision for a parent, but most of the couples who come to me have had a longstanding infertility problem. For them, selective reduction is just one more hurdle to deal with. But they are better able to cope when they know the facts: a woman with a quadruple pregnancy has about a 25 percent chance of losing all four babies, but she can decrease the loss rate to about 5 percent by reducing to twins. The risks of prematurity, cerebral palsy and genetic abnormalities (if tested) are all reduced, too.

Reduction will always be controversial. A woman has an abortion because she wants—for whatever reason—to not have a child. But women who have reductions are often desperate to have children. In high-risk situations, reduction may be the best way—sometimes the only way—for that to happen. I realize that in the minds of pro-lifers, this reasoning is flawed. But if performing this procedure means that couples who have suffered years of anguish can have their own healthy children, I'll take all the criticism I get."

Click Here for Complete Article
 

Theresa M. Erickson, Esq.
Surrogacy Lawyer & Egg Donation Lawyer 
www.EricksonLaw.net

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FRIDAY LEGAL UPATES - Wisconsin Adoption, Georgia Right to Life Group, Missouri Donor Legislation, North Dakota Egg Legislation, Hawaii Civil Union, Indian Surrogacy Update, Australian Twins & ESHRE

Well, welcome to our Friday Legal Updates (TGIF).  We have quite a bit of news out there from this week, so enjoy each one, and please comment to your heart’s desire.

Wisconsin – Woman Charged with Unauthorized Adoption.  A Missouri woman faces a felony child abduction charge in Wisconsin where she's accused of buying a baby from a couple for $6,000.   There was a criminal complaint filed Thursday stating that 36-year-old Denise Novotny of Clinton, MO, received the infant shortly after she was born at Aurora Medical Center in Hartford in December 2004.  The complaint also alleges that Novotny had the couple sign a surrogate birth contract to disguise the crime.   This sounds like adoptions being disguised as a surrogacy is a trend for circumventing the laws of adoption.  We need to be wary of this and be on alert for this situation in our own practices.

Click Here for Complete Article

Georgia – The Georgia Right to Life Introduces Legislation to Protect the Mother and Child.  Georgia Right to Life today announced the filing of the Ethical Treatment of Human Embryos act in the Georgia Senate SB-169.  Their argument is that the recent birth of the octuplets to the woman in Southern California demands government oversight of the fertility industry, according to this group. 

“This industry is one of the most lucrative medical fields and among the least regulated. In response to this need, Georgia State Senator Ralph Hudgens along with other co-sponsors in the Senate leadership have introduced legislation that will place limits on the creation and transfer of embryos produced by In vitro fertilization (IVF).

‘This bill is written to help reduce the attendant harm that could come to the mother and her children through the creation and implantation of more embryos than is medically recommended by industry watchdog groups like the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology’ says Daniel Becker, President of Georgia Right to Life.

‘This bill would limit the number of embryos transferred in any given cycle to the same number that are fertilized, up to a maximum of three. This bill is similar to the same common-sense regulations passed in other countries such as the United Kingdom, Germany and Italy’ said Becker.

Georgia is the first state in the nation to file this legislation. However, in Britain they have similar legislation, passed in 2004, that protects the embryo and the mother from these harmful practices.

Click Here for Complete Article

The language of the bill-SB 169

North Dakota – North Dakota House Gives Fertilized Egg Full Rights. News just out of North Dakota - we have a bill pending that intends to give a fertilized human egg the legal rights of a human being.  It appears that the intention is to put a complete ban on abortion in that state.  However, based on the field that I am in, I am concerned what it will do to the infertile couple/person with embryos frozen in that state.  What are your thoughts after reading below?

“BISMARCK, N.D. — A measure approved by the North Dakota House gives a fertilized human egg the legal rights of a human being, a step that would essentially ban abortion in the state.

The bill is a direct challenge to Roe v. Wade, the U.S. Supreme Court decision that extended abortion rights nationwide, supporters of the legislation said.

Representatives voted 51-41 to approve the measure Tuesday. It now moves to the North Dakota Senate for its review.

The bill declares that “any organism with the genome of homo sapiens” is a person protected by rights granted by the North Dakota Constitution and state laws.

The measure’s sponsor, Rep. Dan Ruby, R-Minot, said the legislation did not automatically ban abortion. Ruby has introduced bills in previous sessions of the Legislature to prohibit abortion in North Dakota.

“This language is not as aggressive as the direct ban legislation that I’ve proposed in the past,” Ruby said during House floor debate on Tuesday. “This is very simply defining when life begins, and giving that life some protections under our Constitution - the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”

Critics of the measure say it will cost millions of dollars to defend. Ruby said the state has been willing to go to bat for other principles that were less important.

In Oklahoma, meanwhile, a state House committee Tuesday approved legislation that would prohibit physicians from performing abortions solely on account of the gender of a woman’s fetus, even though the measure’s author said there is no evidence the practice has ever occurred in the state.

The legislation passed 20-2 by the House Public Health Committee. The bill now goes to the full House for consideration.

The author of the bill, Rep. Dan Sullivan, R-Tulsa, said it is designed to stop couples from using the gender of a fetus as a reason to get an abortion. Sullivan said a doctor would be prohibited from performing an abortion if the mother specifically said the fetus’ sex was the reason.

However, he said there is no evidence the practice has occurred in Oklahoma. “I haven’t received any definite information that proves it,” Sullivan said.”

Click Here for Complete Article

Missouri – Sounds to me like the states are responding in great numbers to the advancements in reproductive technologies and now the octuplet controversy, which I vow not to address in today’s updates.  However, I did post this last week, but I am reposting again in light of the other states to follow.

It appears that the Missouri legislature, headed by Cynthia Davis.  In her bill (HB355) she is attempting to ban all anonymous donation (egg and sperm) in Missouri and give all donor-conceived offspring the right to access the donor’s identity at age 21.   In fact, she wants the child’s birth certificate reflect the biological parent’s name (yes, she called the donor a parent) and the donor parent’s name as well.  She is not intending to create any legal relationship between donors and the offspring, but the use of the word PARENT is extremely disturbing.  What do you think?

Click Here for the information on this bill HB355

Blog On Bill HB355 

Hawaii – Civil Unions in Hawaii.  Hawaii’s House passed a civil union bill this month by a vote of 33-15. 

"The bill, which now moves to the state Senate, would grant partners in civil unions the same benefits, protections and responsibilities as married couples under state law. The state would also recognize civil unions, domestic partnerships and same-sex marriages performed in other states. Partners in civil unions would not have the same protections as married couples under federal law, so the recognition is a rung below treating homosexual and heterosexual couples equally."

According to the Honolulu Advertiser, "The lawmaker who missed the vote, state Rep. K. Mark Takai, D-34th (Newtown, Waiau, Pearl City), who is preparing to deploy with the Hawai'i Army National Guard to Kuwait, supports civil unions."

Click Here for Complete Article

Other Article on www.Proudparenting.com

Australia – Lesbians Win Damages for Second Child – yes, you heard it right.  A lesbian couple have won the right to be compensated by their IVF Physician for the wrongful birth of one of their twins.  The woman gave birth to healthy non-identical twin girls in July of 2004, and the couple had sought $348,000.00 in damages for the cost of raising one of the girls.  The court papers state that the woman had told the doctor to implant only one embryo; however, two embryos were implanted.  Their intital case had been rejected by the courts, but was overturned on appeal with the court granting damages of $317,000.00 plus fees, which includes fees for a private Steiner school.

Click Here for Complete Article

India – Surrogacy is No Business, It’s a Need: Experts.  With reproductive tourism exploding, I like to keep people alert to the dangers of going to countries where the laws are not yet in place.  If you think California is the wild west, think again, as that is not the case.  But, if you are going to India, buyer beware!

"Surrogacy is not a business, it arises out of need. It gives women an opportunity to make a bright future for themselves and for others," R S Sharma, deputy director, Indian Council Medical Research (ICMR) said at a seminar held at the ILS Law College on Wednesday.

The ILS Law college conducted this seminar chiefly to identify the loopholes in the proposed Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART) (regulation) Bill and suggest changes.

Sharma presented the draft bill on the issue title Assisted Reproductive Technology (regulation) Bill, 2008'. In India, there is no law to regulate surrogacy and the government now wants to fill this void to avoid exploitation of the parties involved. Following this, a 15-member committee, including experts from ICMR, Ministry of Health and specialists in the field, prepared this bill and will table it before the Lok Sabha in the ensuing session.

"It is incorrect to label surrogacy as a business. Both parties involved are benefited and is undertaken only after they arrive at a mutual consensus. Take for instance this case where the wife decided to become a surrogate because she needed money for her husband's treatment. Also, the family was so financially weak that they were not being able to make their ends meet. After opting for surrogacy, she was not only able to get her husband treated, but also spent on her children's education. Would you call this a business?" Sharma questioned the audience.

As a result of the increasing demand for various types of ARTs, infertility clinics too have mushroomed indiscriminately across the nation. In the absence of national registry of ART clinics, there is no reliable information available on their number.

Sanjay Gupte, director, Centre for Research in Reproduction, who was also present at the seminar, said, "It is often said that doctors make good profit from surrogacy in India. However, very few talk of the drug companies that sell infertility drugs and make money. They (the companies) are, in fact, the ones who are promoting malpractices in the system. We need strict laws to bind such companies, this in turn will help control the number of ART clinics."

Sunita Tadulwalkar, in-charge of the IVF Clinic at Ruby Hall, said, "This was the most awaited bill as the number of ART clinics has increased significantly over the past five years. The bill will definitely improve the quality of treatment. However, I also see that the bill does not mention insurance. There is a lot of risk involved in this process and insurance companies flatly refuse to pay for infertility treatments."

Students of the ILS Law College identified loopholes in the bill, particularly with respect to the status and rights of children born out of such process.

 

Click Here for Complete Article

 

ESHRE NEWS – The European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology in their January 2009 publication gave an update on their project involving the status of donor anonymity and embryo research.  The picture emerging so far is mixed, from countries such as Belgium, Italy, Norway, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Protugal, Russia, Spain and the UK, though most countries favor anonymous sperm donation.  The exceptions are Germany (where egg donation is not allowed, but sperm donation is), Norway and UK, which all give children conceived by donor sperm the right at the age of 18 to know the donor’s identity.  Women in Russia and so far Belgium can be treated by known and anonymous sperm donation. No gamete donation is allowed in Italy.  More details can be found on the ESHRE website at www.eshre.com.

 

 

Theresa M. Erickson, Esq.
Surrogacy Lawyer & Egg Donation Lawyer 
www.EricksonLaw.net

Subscribe to my blog at: http://www.surrogacyeggdonorblog.com/subscribe.html

 
 

 

North Dakota House Gives Fertilized Eggs Human Status

News just out of North Dakota - we have a bill pending that intends to give a fertilized human egg the legal rights of a human being.  It appears that the intention is to put a complete ban on abortion in that state.  However, based on the field that I am in, I am concerned what it will do to the infertile couple/person with embryos frozen in that state.  What are your thoughts after reading below?

"BISMARCK, N.D. -- A measure approved by the North Dakota House gives a fertilized human egg the legal rights of a human being, a step that would essentially ban abortion in the state.

The bill is a direct challenge to Roe v. Wade, the U.S. Supreme Court decision that extended abortion rights nationwide, supporters of the legislation said.

Representatives voted 51-41 to approve the measure Tuesday. It now moves to the North Dakota Senate for its review.

The bill declares that "any organism with the genome of homo sapiens" is a person protected by rights granted by the North Dakota Constitution and state laws.

The measure's sponsor, Rep. Dan Ruby, R-Minot, said the legislation did not automatically ban abortion. Ruby has introduced bills in previous sessions of the Legislature to prohibit abortion in North Dakota.

"This language is not as aggressive as the direct ban legislation that I've proposed in the past," Ruby said during House floor debate on Tuesday. "This is very simply defining when life begins, and giving that life some protections under our Constitution - the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness."

Critics of the measure say it will cost millions of dollars to defend. Ruby said the state has been willing to go to bat for other principles that were less important.

In Oklahoma, meanwhile, a state House committee Tuesday approved legislation that would prohibit physicians from performing abortions solely on account of the gender of a woman's fetus, even though the measure's author said there is no evidence the practice has ever occurred in the state.

The legislation passed 20-2 by the House Public Health Committee. The bill now goes to the full House for consideration.

The author of the bill, Rep. Dan Sullivan, R-Tulsa, said it is designed to stop couples from using the gender of a fetus as a reason to get an abortion. Sullivan said a doctor would be prohibited from performing an abortion if the mother specifically said the fetus' sex was the reason.

However, he said there is no evidence the practice has occurred in Oklahoma. "I haven't received any definite information that proves it," Sullivan said."

Click Here for Complete Article at Fox News

Theresa M. Erickson, Esq.
Surrogacy Lawyer & Egg Donation Lawyer 
www.EricksonLaw.net

Subscribe to my blog at: http://www.surrogacyeggdonorblog.com/subscribe.html

 

FRIDAY LEGAL UPATES - Octuplets, Missouri Donor Legislation & Indian Surrogacy

 

A. Missouri – it appears that the Missouri legislature, headed by Cynthia Davis. In her bill (HB355) she is attempting to ban all anonymous donation (egg and sperm) in Missouri and give all donor-conceived offspring the right to access the donor’s identity at age 21.          In fact, she wants the child’s birth certificate reflect the biological parent’s name (yes, she called the donor a parent) and the donor parent’s name as well. She is not intending to create any legal relationship between donors and the offspring, but the use of the word PARENT is extremely disturbing. What do you think?

 

 

Click Here for the information on this bill HB355

Blog On Bill HB355

B. Octuplet Case – the ASRM is now considering to kick the octuplet doctor out of the society. What affect do you think this will really have? And, with his new case of quadruplets, why do patients keep seeking him out for treatment, especially with his (un)success rates?

Click Here for an Article on this Case in WSJ

Click Here for an Article on this Case in Union Tribune

Click Here for an Article on this Case in New York Post

C. India Surrogacy & a Legal Warning – I read an informative article on a warning to couples/individuals going to India for a surrogate mother. The article discusses what I have guessed all along, that pursuing surrogacy in India is still a risky process because there are still no comprehensive laws covering the practice. I am always concerned when people cut corners when they are in such a vulnerable and desperate state of mind. What do you think?

See article at www.theage.com.au

Theresa M. Erickson, Esq. www.ericksonlaw.net

 

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The Octuplets and Regulations - What Should We Do?

I have been trying to show restraint with my opinion on the octuplets because I believe strongly in reproductive freedom for everyone in America, and I also understand an individuals strong desire for children.  But, I really enjoyed the piece written by George Dvorsky on the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies Blog.  He makes quite a few good points involving common sense and restraint.  As many have cited, he wants ASRM to set up and give their guidelines some teeth.  I am not certain if that will happen or if it should happen, but let me know what you think. 

"Like a lot of people last week, I was shocked to find out that Nadya Suleman, the mother of the octuplets born last week in Los Angeles, already has 6 children—all between the ages of 2 and 7.

And that she is a single mother who has already filed for bankruptcy, and that she is a self-described “professional student” who lives off education grants and parental money.....

Looking at this case one gets the feeling that some fertility clinics look upon their patients as nothing more than customers. Given the nature of their work, however, this attitude will simply not do.

A lassez-faire approach to repro-tech won’t work to protect the interests of those hoping to use these technologies and to protect those lives that are created as a result. I agree that regulation should be very liberal and accommodating to a diverse set of interests, but complete de-regulation would be both dangerous and facile.

But establishing regulations and guidelines is one thing, enforcing it is quite another.

In some cases, this one included, it would be perfectly reasonable for the state to intervene and deny access, or at the very least compel clinics to follow a strict set of guidelines to prevent this sort of thing from happening. It’s time to empower groups like the ASRM—particularly now as new reproductive technologies are emerging quickly. This way, fertility clinics will be compelled to follow the rules and be held accountable for their actions.

It’s clear that this has to happen. Clinics won’t regulate themselves.

But why should we have expected them to? They’re not the ones who now have to raise these children. "

Click Here For Complete Article

See Also Article by the Reproductive Rights Prof Blog

Theresa M. Erickson, Esq.
Surrogacy Lawyer & Egg Donation Lawyer 
www.EricksonLaw.net

Subscribe to my blog at: http://www.surrogacyeggdonorblog.com/subscribe.html


 

Ireland Supreme Court Begins Hearing on the Use of Embryos After Divorce

With all of the news surrounding the octuplets, I figured I would let the dust settle for a while and address the couple in Ireland fighting over their embryos. 

As reported by the IrishTimes.com, "A man who separated from his wife after agreeing to her undergoing fertility treatment is prevented both by the Constitution and various documents signed by him from stopping her having the remaining embryos implanted in her womb with a view to becoming pregnant again, the Supreme Court was told today.

The State, because of the 1983 constitutional amendment requiring it to protect and indicate the right to life of the unborn, must facilitate the implantation of the remaining embryos, Gerard Hogan SC, for the woman, said.

Asked by Mr Justice Adrian Hardiman if the State is always required to facilitate implantation of viable embryos, counsel said he was not arguing women could be coerced into carrying embryos.

In this case, the woman could not be denied implantation as she wanted to provide “a home” for the embryos. Her attitude was a “highly relevant factor” in determining the extent of the State’s obligations towards these particular embryos."

How do you think the court should rule?  As for me, having written on behalf of Randy Roman in the case of Roman v. Roman for the US Supreme Court, my vote is for the husband.

Click Here for the Complete Article

Theresa M. Erickson, Esq.
Surrogacy Lawyer & Egg Donation Lawyer 
www.EricksonLaw.net

Subscribe to my blog at: http://www.surrogacyeggdonorblog.com/subscribe.html

The Coming War over our Embryos - Slate Weighs In

Slate has written a very provocative article regarding the fate of embryos in the US and where potential legislation may be moving. 

"Last week at the White House, President Bush showcased embryo adoption as an alternative to embryonic stem-cell research. The event alarmed the in vitro fertilization industry. Proponents of embryo adoption "have an explicit political agenda to actually take away choices from infertility patients," an industry spokesman told the New York Times.

Actually, an explicit agenda is what pro-lifers don't yet have. Already overwhelmed by patient advocates in the fight over stem cells, they have no death wish to confront the millions of Americans whose families have tried IVF. Promoting embryo adoption—finding somebody to rescue surplus embryos so IVF couples can go on making them and leaving them behind—is an attempt to avoid that confrontation. But last week's House debate over stem cells signaled that the confrontation is coming. Pro-lifers don't think anyone, including a parent, has the right to doom an embryo to death. They're on a collision course with IVF."
 
I am interested to hear what others have to say on this issue, especially those patients now facing this issue in their own lives. 
 
 
Theresa M. Erickson, Esq.
Surrogacy Lawyer & Egg Donation Lawyer 
www.EricksonLaw.net

Vatican Issues Statement on Embryos & IVF

The Vatican issued a document regarding the issues behind bioethics on Friday, explaining to Roman Catholics and non-Catholics alike the church’s stance on such issues.

To read the New York Times article regarding the document please go to: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/13/world/europe/13vatican.html?_r=1&ref=policy

For the actual document please go to: http://www.usccb.org/comm/Dignitaspersonae/Dignitas_Personae.pdf 

What are your thoughts?

Theresa M. Erickson, Esq.
Surrogacy Lawyer and Egg Donation Lawyer
www.EricksonLaw.net

 

Leftover Embryos - What Shall You Do With Them?

Duke University Medical Center released a new study this week regarding embryo donation for research. They found in their study that more than 41% of patients who had finished fertility treatments and had leftover embryos would rather donate them to research than to another couple.

These findings are significant considering that the national debate regarding research using stem cells and embryos is highly controversial. However, the patients that said they would donate their excess embryos to research said that they would rather donate to research because they did not want the embryos to become children in families other than their own.

Additionally, these patients also said that donating the excess embryos to research was easier than simply destroying the embryos outright. Could this mean that the nation’s feelings about stem cell and embryo research are changing?

Click Here for Complete Article

Important Read for Intended Parents, Surrogates and Donors

"The Ultimate Medical Privacy Guide: 100 Tools and Resources to Secure Your Health Records" looks to be an important read for all ART clients.

"Have you heard the positive points about putting your health records online? Or, like many, are you concerned about security and privacy issues about using your credit card online, let alone adding your health records to a Web-based program? If you stand in either camp, you’re not alone. But, even online health record advocates are leery about security.

With that fear in mind, the following list contains 100 tools and resources you can use to make an informed decision about this issue. Health records have, historically, been protected by regulations that protect the patient’s privacy. An online venue, on the other hand, requires different measures to secure sensitive information. So, we’ve included links to opinions about health record security, tools that will help you understand new regulations and technology that centers on health industry security, blogs that focus on frequently updated news about this movement, and background information on eHealth, Health 2.0 and law support for various health issues."

Click Here for a Link to Post

Embryos - What shall we do with the remaining created through IVF?

As the LA Times recently reported deciding what to do with excess embryos is a daunting task for many individuals and couples who have gone through fertility treatments and achieved a healthy pregnancy.

Additionally, if you decide to donate your cryopreserved embryos to research it is often a lot easier said than done, especially in states that do not allow embryos to be used in medical research. However, even if you are donating your embryos in a state that allows embryos to be used for research it is still a daunting task with a lot of paperwork that needs to be completed.

Because of all of the paperwork many clinics report that couples and/or individuals are more likely to discard their excess embryos because that is the “easier” option. Yet, for some donating or discarding is not even an option because they feel that they would be donating or discarding a “child,” which, if that is your belief, only makes this decision all the more difficult.

However, if these embryos were to be donated to science there are numerous maladies that are being researched to find a cure for and these embryos could help find those cures.

Click Here for Complete Article

Court: Embryo implanted in mother's womb after father's death not an heir

This article is interesting, as it clearly shows us that we are moving forward each day into a brave new world.

See article:  http://www.arkansasnews.com/archive/2008/01/11/News/344782.html