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Old 04-30-2007, 10:50 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Exclamation Canadians breaking law in quest to conceive

Canadians breaking law in quest to conceive

Canadians are turning to the black market in their quest to conceive a baby, illegally buying human eggs, a CBC News investigation has found.
CBC journalist Kelly Ryan recently contacted six Canadian women who were advertising their eggs on the internet.
Within days, three wrote back with an offer and each said they were willing to undergo treatment that could net as many as 20 human eggs.
Their prices ranged between $5,000 and $7,000.
"That just floored me," said Dr. Roger Pierson, a fertility doctor in Saskatoon.
"We would assume there would be a subterranean traffic in eggs and sperm based on telephone conversations, but to have it written down is beyond my comprehension at this point."
Law aimed at preventing cloning

Under the Assisted Human Reproduction Technology Act passed in 2004 to prevent cloning, it's not illegal for women to sell eggs, but it is illegal for anyone to buy them.
Anyone convicted of buying eggs can face a fine of up to $500,000 or 10 years in jail.
"I don't know an egg donor in Canada that hasn't been compensated," said one of the women contacted by the CBC.
CBC News agreed not to name the young woman to protect the people she has helped with her eggs.
She said the last time she helped a couple, both she and they swore in writing that no money would change hands.
The fertility clinic needed that assurance to stay within the letter of the law. But it was a lie.
$5,500 in envelope

"We all didn't care. They didn't care. I didn't care, because the money was just an energy exchange. It was just a thank you," the woman said.
The day her eggs were retrieved, the couple handed her an envelope containing about $5,500 in cash.
Sellers interviewed by the CBC say they don't do it for the money, but to help childless couples. But given the toll on their bodies, they feel compensation is fair.

"Anyone who has been through any fertility treatments knows that people would not do it for free," said one woman interviewed by CBC.
Exploitation worries

That worries Tim Caulfield, a professor of health sciences and law at the University of Alberta.
He said university students and women of "low socio-economic status" might feel pressure to sell their eggs for cash.
"The concern is women are going to be exploited. They're desperate for money," he told CBC News.
In response to the CBC News investigation, Health Minister Tony Clement urged Canadians to follow the law, saying he hopes the market will ease.
"The law is quite clear and it's based on Canadians' own submissions to Parliament that they don't want to commercialize the trading of eggs or sperm," Clement said. "Clearly, many Canadians who find it difficult to conceive do use assisted human reproduction technology and we want to encourage that."
"Canadians who want to start families should be given the assistance of a legal framework that helps them do that, and that's exactly what we're trying to do."
/* */

Source CBC Canada
Monday, April 30, 2007 | 5:39 PM MT
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Old 05-02-2007, 10:28 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Hey BeetleGirl,

Good article and I can understand why some women would do it but I guess I am just to chicken. You don't know if those eggs have any issues and atleast if you were going to use egg donation you know the clinic's have check them for diease and other stuff. But I can totally understand the desparartion that some of these women feel.

On other notes I will be e-mailing you just have not had time lately. TAKE CARE

Cooper
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Old 05-03-2007, 08:57 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Cooper,
Tell me about it.
I am so swamped.
I'll be in touch soon.


Human reproduction board lacks expertise, critics say
Board members at the Canadian agency that enforces laws regulating human reproduction are ill-informed and may stifle use of new technology, critics say.

Since the Human Reproduction Technology Act passed in 2004, the new agency, Assisted Human Reproduction Canada, has held one meeting.

Some members have spoken out against abortion, stem cell research and some standard procedures for in vitro fertilization, said Beverly Hanck of the Infertility Awareness Association of Canada in Montreal.

"It's difficult to believe that they have their visors sufficiently open to view this new technology as it's happening, and in the world we're living in," said Hanck.

Dr. André Lalonde of the Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Canada, who was on the selection committee that recommended board members, is also not impressed with the final selection, which includes two from the committee's short list. Lalonde said there is no one with direct expertise in the fertility field on the board.

"Nice, willing people," Lalonde said of the board members. "But they have no idea of what they're talking."

The chair, former Nova Scotia Conservative premier John Hamm, was phoned directly by the health minister's office regarding his appointment, CBC journalist Kelly Ryan said.

Hanck played a tape of board member David Novak talking about his appointment. "Well, I received a phone call from one of the assistants to the prime minister," Novak said.

Seeking patient input
The panel on human reproduction includes no fertility doctors or patient representatives, while committees for other diseases such as cancer include patients, Hanck said.

"I've been advised that there is a former patient on the board, so I think Canadians should take comfort in that," said Health Minister Tony Clement to CBC News.

Hanck wants to know when that board member was a patient, what he or she knows about current technologies, and why the person is not identified.

Patients cannot express their concerns to their representative on the board if they don't know who the person is, Hanck added.

The board's president, Elinor Wilson, told CBC News the board has ways of getting input from patients if needed.

"We may need advice from those people," Wilson said. "The agency does have the capacity to establish committees and advisory panels where other expertise can be brought in."

The board will have an opportunity to begin its work over the next year, Wilson said.

The board has three empty positions that could be filled with fertility patients or doctors. Clement called that prospect "interesting," but made no promises.
Source: CBC News Thursday May 3, 2007
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