July
18
  2:52:02 AM

HUMAN EGG TRADE HAS A HUMAN COST

The desire of older professional women to bear IVF children with donated eggs relies upon exploited women in Eastern Europe, the London Daily Mail claims. Investigative journalist Fran Abrams went to Romania and the Ukraine and asked to buy eggs at IVF clinics linked to prominent London clinics.

The issue has been hotly debated after 62-year-old Dr Patti Rashbrook gave birth to a boy, becoming Britain's oldest mother. Ms Abrams found that egg donation had ruined the reproductive system of some poor women in Bucharest. Recently married Alina Ionescu, of Bucharest, for instance, was 18 when she sold her eggs two years ago for ?150. The procedure left her ovaries so scarred that she is now infertile. How does she feel about British fertility tourists? "I would wish those women luck," she told the Daily Mail. "Because right now I can understand how they feel."


 

 Search BioEdge

 Subscribe to BioEdge newsletter
rss Subscribe to BioEdge RSS feed

 Best of the web

 Recent Posts
Indian surrogate for US woman dies in Gurjarat
18 May 2012
Do reproductive rights survive gender reassignment?
19 May 2012
South African activists begin euthanasia campaign
19 May 2012
70 assisted suicides in Washington state in 2011
19 May 2012
Would-be grandparents pay for their daughters’ egg freezing
19 May 2012

 Tags
informed consent, sex selection, surrogacy, genetic testing, UK, India, IVF, Netherlands, organ trafficking, assisted suicide, stem cells, bioethics, Down syndrome, abortion, research, neuroscience, human drama, Canada, commercialization, sperm donation, clinical trials, Australia, embryonic stem cells, law, China, US, organ transplants, suicide, organ donation, euthanasia,