December
18
  10:45:56 PM

Ireland under pressure to create IVF law

Pressure is mounting on Irish politicians to make legislation for assisted reproduction. Although a 2005 government report urged Ireland's parliament, the Oireachtas, to regulate Ireland's IVF industry, nothing has been done. In a country where abortion is illegal, tinkering with unborn human life is potentially explosive. But two recent developments have made it clear that politicians will be forced to take a stand.

First, the Irish Medical Council has issued new guidelines for IVF clinics which one doctor called the biggest change in medical ethics in the history of the state. Up until now the clinics have been unable to destroy embryos because they are surplus to requirements or in the course of research. All unused embryos had to be frozen and stored.

However, the Medical Council has declared that in the absence of legislation, it was no longer going to regulate the status of frozen embryos. “We have generally had a pro-life bias in the Medical Council but that appears to have gone,” an IVF specialist, David Walsh, told the London Times. “We have never destroyed embryos and we haven’t experimented using them because the medical guidelines have always said we couldn’t, so I’m amazed this has come out like this.”

And this week the Supreme Court declared that the anti-abortion clause in Ireland's constitution could not be construed to apply to IVF. In a unanimous judgement Mrs Justice Susan Denham declared that that the anti-abortion clause, Article 40.3.3, envisaged a balancing act between the life of the mother and her unborn child and this could only exist where there was a physical connection between them. She said the 'unborn' under this article of the Constitution refers to an embryo after implantation. 

Another justice said that if the Oireachtas did not address such issues, Ireland may become by default an unregulated environment for controversial practices.

These remarks were made in settling a lengthy dispute between an estranged husband and wife over frozen embryos. The court ruled that a 43-year-old mother of two, Mary Roche, was not entitled to have the embryos implanted in her womb so that she could become pregnant against the wishes of her husband. ~ London Times, Dec 13; RTE News, Dec 15




 

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