Important information on human egg donation laws
11th December 2006
Please find attached the Lawyers’ Christian Fellowship response to the Human Fertilisation and Embyrology Authority (HFEA) consultation on Egg Donation. There is a pressing need to stand up for the biblical principle of the sanctity of life at this time in our Nation and for mankind not to usurp the role of our Creator God in experimenting and creating life for a utilitarian purpose. The deadline for the consultation was Friday 8th December, but please take the time to write into the HFEA with your comments as this is the way to increase pressure on them. The address to email is eggsforresearch@hfea.gov.uk.
As the HFEA push for Egg Donation to be increased, we need to inform people of the dangers, both medically and ethically, of egg donation. Please also find below the Hands Off Our Ovaries newsletter with up to date news on this most important issue.
You may also have seen The Sunday Telegraph yesterday with leaked news laying out reform proposals for the HFE Act that will appear at the end of this week. See http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/12/10/nivf110.xml
Josephine
Quintavalle of Comment on Reproductive Ethics has made the following
comment on this issue:-
The proposals in relationship to the
creation of animal/human hybrid embryos are particularly worrying
because licence applications have been with the HFEA since the
beginning of November and we believe the responses will now be rushed
through and will be in favour.
The Government will propose
that the creation of hybrid and chimera embryos in vitro should not
be allowed, but the law will contain a power enabling regulators to
set our circumstances in which the creation of hybrid and chimera
embryos may be allowed under licence, for research purposes
only.
Currently there are two licence applications to use
animal eggs, fused with human tissue, for research purposes (King’s
College (Dr Stephen Minger and Newcastle University (Dr Lyle
Armstrong). Prof Wilmut is also expected to make application as
well. On the HFEA website it is stated that they will reach a
decision on these applications in January. It goes without
saying the the current Govt is very keen to lead the world in stem
cell research, and these proposals are meant to further that
ambition.
A recent precedent. Recently the HFEA stated
in a public consultation document on egg donation, that they had
issued a licence for egg-sharing for research, even though they had
not concluded their public consultation on the issue at stake. They
argued that they have to consider applications when they are received
and cannot delay response simply because they are engaged in a public
consultation on the matter. In this instance they also added
that ‘If, after due consideration, the Authority decides that
egg sharing for research is not appropriate, it will be possible for
the Licence Committee to review their decision for the egg sharing
licence based on the new policy’. A classic piece of HFEA
absurdity.
I believe they will use the same rationale to grant
in January the licences applied.
Andrea Minichiello Williams
LCF Public Policy Officer
0771 2591164
HandsOffOurOvaries Newsletter, December 2006
December 1, 2006,
CONTENTS:
- HandsOff At The University Of Edinburgh
- Woman Sells Eggs on Internet to Pay off Debt
- Cloning is a Women's Issue
- Pro-Woman Stem Cell Res., Human Cloning Policy
- Eggs On Sale
- Do Not Allow Exploitation
- Seoul Tightens Egg/Sperm Donation Rules
- Stem Cells: The Good, The Bad, The Barely in Control
- Advent of International Mail Order Egg Donation
HANDSOFF AT THE UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH (23 November 2006): HandsOff Chair, Diane Beeson, was one of four panelists at a University of Edinburgh-sponsored debate exploring the controversial issues of egg donation for medical research. The other panelists, included Donna Dickenson, Professor of Medical Ethics and Humanities at Birkbeck College, London, who was also critical of exposing women to the risks of the procedure. Harry Griffin, Director of Roslin Institute, Edinburgh and Daniel Brison, Scientific Director, Department of Reproductive Medicine, St. Mary's Hospital in Manchester, discussed the significance of egg donation for the advancement of science. Dr. Dickenson opened the discussion with a detailed description of the invasiveness of the process of ovarian hyperstimulation and raised issues of commercialization and commodification of women's bodies. Dr. Griffin acknowledged that there was much research that scientists could do without the necessity of using human eggs, while Dr. Brison argued that although egg donation is "time-consuming, costly and could pose health risks...without it, it is doubtful that crucial biomedical research into diseases like Parkinson's, diabetes and multiple sclerosis can continue." Nevertheless, Dr. Brison agreed that the movement toward minimal stimulation IVF is in the interests of women. Dr. Beeson placed the issue of hormonal stimulation of women for egg harvesting in the historical context of the abuses of women with other hormones. This includes both the DES (diethylstilbesterol) disaster, and hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for menopausal women. Between five and ten million women were exposed before DES became linked to a virulent form of vaginal cancer, and it was also decades before the long-term risks of HRT were documented. She pointed out that Louise Brown was not a product of ovarian hyperstimulation, but rather of natural cycle IVF and spoke in support of the HandsOff call for a moratorium on egg donation for research until more adequate information on its risks to donors can be provided. The event, held at Our Dynamic Earth, on November 23rd, was attended by about ninety members of the public who also participated in the discussion with questions and comments.
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DAILY
MAIL/EVENING STANDARD, (UK), WOMAN SELLS "EGGS" ON INTERNET
TO PAY OFF £15,000 CREDIT CARD DEBTS (1st November 2006):
A British woman, Alexandra Saunders, a 26-year-old, who already has
three jobs to try and pay off her debts, posted her details on an
American website after reading about the huge amount that can be made
in a woman's magazine. It is illegal for a woman to sell her eggs
within the UK but egg donation is big business in the US where
childless couples pay up to £20,000 in exchange the eggs of a
young healthy woman. Critics warned that many young women were
unaware of the potential serious health risks of donating eggs.
Josephine Quintavalle, of Comment on Reproductive Ethics, said: 'The
sort of money on offer in the US to egg donors is extremely tempting
to some but I think at the very least women should be well informed
about the risks. Egg donation is not like sperm donation. Women's
eggs have to be harvested and the procedure can cause infertility,
illness and even death. That is why people in the US pay such high
prices for eggs because of the dangers involved. A young woman may
think that getting £20,000 for her eggs is worth the risk. But
then she might want children at 30 and find out she can't have them.
Ironically, she then may have to pay the same amount for someone
else's eggs.'
SOURCE:
www.dailymail.co.uk
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NATIONAL
REVIEW ONLINE, CLONING IS A WOMEN'S ISSUE (October 25, 2006):
Hands Off Our Ovaries is
featured in this article, which is described as a non-partisan group
with an international reach, calling for "a moratorium on egg
extraction for research purposes until such time as global discourse
and scientific research yields information sufficient to establish
adequate informed consent". Launched on International Women's
Day in March, the article quotes Jennifer Lahl as a spokesperson for
the organisation, which aims to unite all women, whether pro-life,
pro-choice, conservative or liberal, and serve as a wake-up call for
those who have never thought through the implications of egg
donation. The article points out that IVF is a largely unregulated
industry worth an estimated $38 million which pays little attention
to the potential long-term harm from hyperstimulation. It cites two
bioethicists from Stanford who declared last year in an article in
Science magazine that at a minimum women should be made aware both
that the risks include infertility and even death and that their
"donations," in the case of embryonic-stem-cell research
and cloning, may never actually contribute to a cure for anything. It
also describes an advertisement which aired in Saint Louis during
game four of the World Series, which aimed to counter the hype around
cloning and for the first time enable Missourians to hear about the
dangers of egg donation in the embryonic-stem-cell-research debate.
Patricia Heaton, best known for playing Ray Romano's wife on
Everybody Loves Raymond, and a spokesperson for Feminists for Life,
says in the ad, "Amendment 2 [to the state constitution]
actually makes it a constitutional right for fertility clinics to pay
women for eggs. Low-income women will be seduced by big checks and
extracting donor eggs is an extremely complicated, dangerous, and
painful procedure."
SOURCE: www.nationalreview.com
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WE NEED A PRO-WOMAN STEM CELL RESEARCH, HUMAN CLONING POLICY (November 4, 2006): The risks involved in young women providing fresh eggs for cloning research have been overlooked in the cloning debate, writes Marcy Darnovsky, associate executive director of the pro-choice public interest group, the Center for Genetics and Society. But she notes that some women's health advocates and policy makers are beginning to grapple seriously with the issue of egg procurement for research. They are asking hard questions about how women can meaningfully consent to egg retrieval when there is so little data about the safety of the procedure. Egg retrieval involves giving a woman hormones to first "shut down" and then "over-stimulate" her ovaries, followed by surgical extraction of multiple eggs under general anesthesia. Though the procedure is widely used in fertility clinics, data about both its short-term and long-term risks are grossly inadequate. Serious adverse reactions, even several deaths, have been reported. Protection for women is particularly important since enormous numbers of eggs are needed for cloning research. The "cloning race" is leading to exaggerations about how useful cloning will be. It is now recognised that the claim that cloning will lead to cures is far-fetched and that it is likely to be an indirect research tool only. Much more scrutiny is necessary to prevent a repeat of the fiasco in Korea where cloning results were fabricated and more than 13 percent of the 119 South Korean women who provided eggs for Hwang's failed cloning efforts experienced reactions severe enough that they needed to be hospitalized.
SOURCE:
www.lifenews.com
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SCOTSMAN,
UK, EGGS ON SALE (5 November, 2006): Doctors at
the Glasgow Centre for Reproductive Medicine, Scotland's only private
fertility clinic, have been criticized for putting the eggs of
younger women on sale to older women for the first time in Scotland.
The scheme has been condemned for bypassing UK laws banning the sale
of eggs because older women buy the eggs by paying £3,000 [US
$5,700] for the donor's treatment. It has been branded by Professor
Kenyon Mason a way of "getting around the law". In
contrast, a spokesperson for the Human Fertilisation and Embryology
Authority dismissed criticism about the illegality of the practice,
which demonstrates their complacent approach to the dangers of
exploitation and little understanding of the need to protect women
with is the basis of the ban on selling eggs. The article concludes
with information about the dangers of the egg retrieval process
including rupture of the ovaries and death and points out that
clinics are exploiting couples who cannot afford expensive, private
IVF treatment. However, it also includes a quote from an IVF support
group, called Cradle, expressing great excitement about this scheme
which suggests that patients remain unaware of the dangers of egg
donation.
SOURCE: www.scotsman.com
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THE
AGE, AUSTRALIA, "DO NOT ALLOW EXPLOITATION" (Nov 8, 2006):
Neuroscientist, Dr Monique Baldwin, an Australian
representative of Hands Off Our Ovaries, writes that the Senate is
considering whether to allow human embryos to be cloned for
experimentation but have overlooked the fact that cloning requires a
continuous, limitless supply of human eggs which will involve serious
health risks for women. Noting that Hwang Woo-suk used more than 2000
eggs without producing a single human clone, she reports that
scientists are desperate to provide commercial incentives, which will
put disadvantaged and marginalised women at risk. She says scientists
want large numbers of freshly obtained human ova, perhaps even within
an hour of collection, but they still can't tell us how to do that in
a way that is safe for women. Egg extraction involves weeks of
psychological and medical testing, followed by more than a week of
hormone injections. When the time is right, the donor is sedated and
the doctor uses a long needle to pierce the wall of the vagina,
access the ovaries and extract the eggs. One cycle typically produces
seven or eight usable eggs. Up to 10 per cent of women develop
ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome, a painful condition that is
sometimes fatal. Some research points to reproductive cancers in
later life. Given the lack of adequate safety data, it is impossible
to obtain true informed consent. Dr Baldwin also points out that even
stem cell researchers think that the demand for eggs for cloning and
embryo research is premature. Professor Silviu Itescu, chief
scientific adviser for the stem cell company Mesoblast and a
supporter of embryonic stem cell research, argued last week in
BiotechnologyNews.net that he did not understand the sense of urgency
being created around the need to legalise cloning human embryos,
given that the therapeutic concepts being discussed have not worked
in animals. She concludes by saying that there is no scientific
justification for pursuing cloning and putting the lives of
Australian women at risk.
SOURCE: www.theage.com
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KOREA
HERALD: SEOUL TIGHTENS EGG/SPERM DONATION RULES (20 November 2006):
Following the scandal of Hwang
Woo-suk's fabricated stem cell studies and revelations that junior
female members of his research team were exploited to donate eggs,
the law surrounding egg donation will be tightened. Junior
researchers are likely to be banned from donating eggs because of the
possibility of coercion, and the new guidelines will restrict
donation from underage women and those who have not yet had children.
The guidelines will state that donors should only receive a small sum
of compensation. A separate organization to oversee egg donation will
be set up and the donor and her spouse will receive a thorough
explanation of the risks and will be given one month to make a
decision. Unlike the United Kingdom and the United States where
donations are permitted to up to 10 times, women in Korea will be
limited to donating eggs a maximum of three times in their lifetime
because of the potential health damage.
SOURCE:
http://www.koreaherald.com
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NATURE
MEDICINE "STEM CELLS: THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE BARELY IN
CONTROL" (November 2006): This article
highlights the problems associated with using embryonic stem cells to
treat diseases, particularly the tendency of embryonic stem cells to
form tumours. This is a huge obstacle before embryonic stem cells can
be used in a clinical setting and supports Hands off Our Ovaries
position that women are being exploited to donate eggs for
experimental research which is unlikely to be used in the near future
to treat patients and may not be used at all.
SOURCE: Nature
Medicine Volume 12, Number 11, November 2006, 1237-1238
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INDIA,
THE ADVENT OF INTERNATIONAL "MAIL ORDER" EGG DONATION
(November 2006): Some fertility clinics in
developed countries are now sourcing oocyte donors from abroad,
particularly from poorer countries, in what is referred to as
'transnational' or 'international' oocyte donation. The practice has
been condemned for exploiting economically underprivileged women in
poorer countries and disproportionate gains on the part of medical
doctors and fertility clinics. Critics point out that the lack of
medical care available to donors who are at risk of developing severe
ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome. In addition the cost savings from
the lower prescription price of fertility drugs in economically
less-developed countries may not be passed down to the oocyte
recipient but instead be exploited to boost the already substantial
profit margin of fertility clinics and doctors.
SOURCE:
www.spiritindia.com
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egg consultation final.doc
egg consultation final.pdf