1 / 40

Ethical Questions on Egg Donation

Ethical Questions on Egg Donation. June 24 th , 2015. Ana Lita , Ph.D. Global Bioethics Initiative Executive Director. GLOBAL BIOETHICS INITIATIVE (GBI) . GBI is a non-profit organization co-founded in 2011 by Ana Lita , Ph.D , and Charles Debrovner , M.D. 777 UN Plaza, 5 th Floor

mikeandrew
Download Presentation

Ethical Questions on Egg Donation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ethical Questions on Egg Donation June 24th, 2015 Ana Lita, Ph.D. Global Bioethics Initiative Executive Director

  2. GLOBAL BIOETHICS INITIATIVE (GBI) GBI is a non-profit organization co-founded in 2011 by Ana Lita, Ph.D, and Charles Debrovner, M.D. 777 UN Plaza, 5th Floor New York, NY 10017 www.globalbioethics.org alita@globalbioethics.org

  3. MISSION AND VISION Global Bioethics Initiative (GBI) is dedicated to fostering public awareness and understanding of bioethical issues, and to exploring solutions to bioethical challenges. • Focus Issues • Organ Transplantation and Trafficking • Reproductive Rights • Population Aging/End of Life Health Care

  4. International Bioethics Summer School For more details, check our program’s website: www.summerschool.globalbioethics.org VIDEO CLIPS

  5. Basics of Egg Donation Egg donation is a product of in vitro fertilization (IVF) technology (a) Women's ovaries are stimulated with hormones or hormone-mimicking drugs to produce multiple mature eggs b) Eggs are retrieved from ovarian follicles via a transvaginal needle aspiration under ultrasound guidance Video Clip— Egg Retrieval: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i4vLRZPF8GQ

  6. Differences Between Egg Donation and Sperm Donation Egg donation, compared to sperm donation, is: • medically more complicated • significantly more invasive • less amenable to storage than sperm are, although a number of human egg banks have recently sprung up in the U.S. and U.K.   • compensates on a much larger scale (up to hundreds of thousands of dollars per donation cycle)

  7. What are the risks of Egg Donation? Complications are uncommon and usually limited to standard surgical risks of infection, bleeding, and damage to surrounding tissues. The most serious risk is ovarian hyperstimulationsyndrome (OHSS).

  8. Ovarian Hyperstimulation Syndrome • occurs after using injectable hormone medications to stimulate egg development during the preparation period for egg donation • ovaries become swollen and painful, fluid collects in the abdomen • other symptoms include rapid weight gain, abdominal pain, vomiting and shortness of breath • OHSS will usually resolve itself on its own, but can be aided by draining fluid from the abdomen and administering painkillers

  9. Who benefits from egg donation? • Women with a variety of genetic diseases, various illnesses, damaged ovaries, or born with no ovaries at all • Gay couples • Women older than typical child-bearing age • Biomedical Research

  10. Advertised Compensation for Egg Donation in the United States • The country you are in: • In the United States, egg donors are legally allowed to be compensated for the time spent donating, travel arrangements, and potential damage • Prices can range from a few thousand dollars to more than $250,000 as was advertised in a classified ad found in a Princeton campus newspaper a few years ago (right, a similar ad run at Columbia University) 

  11. In the USA • 2. It Depends on the region you are in • Within the U.S., there is regional variation in prices • New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Houston, Washington DC, Boston and Seattle pay egg donors more than smaller ones like Birmingham and Louisville. • In Ohio, some egg donor programs pay between $3000 and $7000 per cycle. • In Boston, Massachusetts, donor programs pay $5,000 per cycle. • A Houston IVF clinic pays between $5,000 and $8,000 per cycle.

  12. Advertised Compensation for Egg Donation in the United States This if from The Stanford Daily (Stanford University Newspaper) Volume 244, Issue 25, October 24th 2013 http://stanforddailyarchive.com/cgi-bin/stanford?a=d&d=stanford20131024-01.2.21.1&e=-------en-20--1--txt-txIN-------

  13. dvertisedCompensation for Egg Donation in the United States

  14. Advertised Compensation for Egg Donation in the United States • Free medical exam, genetic and infectious disease screening. • Health Insurance provided for procedure. • Repeat eligible donors may donate up to six times with medical clearance. • College or some college education required. If you are between the ages of 21-32, legal to work in the United States, and able to commute to our clinic on a daily basis you may be eligible!!

  15. In the USA • 3. Do the egg donor agencies abide by the ASRM code of ethics? • There are no laws regarding how much you can get paid to be an egg donor. However, the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) establishes ethical guidelines for egg donor compensation; the current cap is $10,000 per cycle (egg donors get paid for the time and effort involved but not for their eggs). • In their ethics code, they state that: “Although there is not consensus on the precise payment thatoocyte donors should receive, at this time sums of $5,000 or more require justification and sums above $10,000 go beyond what is appropriate.” • Donating eggs through an ASRM-affiliated egg donor program or IVF clinic essentially means that the egg donor will make between $5,000 and $10,000.

  16. Human egg seller Ron Harris justifies his trade to Ruby Wax “The United States is the Wild West of reproductive technologies” – Art Caplan

  17. Egg Donation in Other Countries • Norway and Germany – banned donating eggs, but not sperm • Sweden – requests a stable relationship for at least a year to receive IVF • Switzerland – only married couples may receive IVF • Austria and Italy – banned egg and sperm donation • Czech Republic, Slovakia, Spain, France, Israel, Belgium, Ghana – donating gametes is allowed • New Zealand and Romania – egg donation is altruistic without any monetary compensation. This is sometimes called “egg sharing.” • Latin America – egg markets exist especially in Argentina, Chile, and Mexico

  18. Egg Donation in Other Countries • Czech Republic • Price: 4.500 EUR • GYNEM - Fertility Clinic – Prague • Israel • Price for 6 mature eggs is 6.000 EUR • Romania • No compensation/”egg sharing” • 30 Israelis Arrested Over Human Egg Trafficking

  19. In the UK • The Human Fertilization and Embryology Authority (HFEA) is the UK's independent regulator overseeing the use of gametes and embryos in fertility treatment and research. • The HFEA licenses fertility clinics and centers carrying out in vitro fertilization (IVF), and other assisted conception procedures and human embryo research.

  20. In the UK • In 2006, anyone who donated either sperm or eggs received monetary compensation for travel expenses & loss of earnings up to £61.28 a day. • Limited compensation: No more than £250 in total for each cycle of donation. • Since 2012 the donor compensation is limited to £750 per cycle for egg donors, “due to recession” • Compensation for sperm donors is £35 for each visit to a clinic.

  21. Developments in biotechnology have a profound effect on women, particularly as they relate to the growing market for human eggs. Three potential objections (with rejoinders where possible) (a) the potential for economic coercion (b) the potential for commodification (c) the problem of unquantified risk Objections To Egg Markets

  22. Objection 1: Economic Coercion • Such large amounts of money could inappropriately compel financially vulnerable women into donating their eggs when they otherwise would not (i.e. collegiate women with exorbitant educational loans)

  23. Economic Coercion in Poorer Countries Cutting Age Biotechnology • Limited economic opportunities make financial compensation an appealing incentive • GlobalARTusa, for example, was a private fertility clinic based in Romania that had internationalized the egg donation market • Couples from anywhere in the world selected donors for physical and personality characteristics, educational background, health status, etc.  • The cost was significantly reduced for international customers (only a few thousand dollars per cycle of eggs), and the monetary compensation was very low for Romanian women who donated their eggs (about $250 per harvest)

  24. Rejoinder 1: Paternalism and Reproductive Freedom • There is an underlying belief that egg donors are forced to make decisions that are ultimately against their best interests. This unnecessary paternalism unduly limits the reproductive (and, in this case, financial) freedom of women—especially poor women • If high monetary “compensation” to egg donors constitutes coercion, then many bright young adults are being “immorally” coerced into becoming lawyers, doctors, bankers, and other types of well-paid professionals  • Egg donation is a viable option for many women who have few options • However… • Large amounts of money, in combination with limited decision-making abilities, create a situation in which it is unethical not to offer these women protection and put egg donation and its impact on women’s health under real scrutiny.  

  25. Objection 2: Commodification Generally, commodification arguments say something to the effect of: If we allow financial compensation for the donation of body parts, then we are essentially treating those parts like commodities Treating body parts like commodities is a gross affront to the intrinsic value of human beings, which leads to treating women as means to an end (not as ends in themselves) The latter is unacceptable, and thus financial compensation is unacceptable when associated with the transfer of body parts Therefore, financial compensation for egg donation is unacceptable ***In addition, proponents of this argument posit slippery slopes if financial compensation ever becomes a standard practice for body parts.

  26. Rejoinder 2: Commodification • The argument assumes that being human is essentially defined by one's body parts • What makes somebody human is intrinsically aligned with “who they are,” their personalities, social roles, conscience, etc.  • Women who have had their ovaries removed feel that they are still women—despite the fact that they can no longer produce eggs  • If so, it is unclear why financial compensation for egg donation should pose such threat to the intrinsic value of women as human beings • ***Worries of commodification are relevant but do not outweigh the interests of childless, infertile couples.

  27. Objection 3:Unquantified Risks vs. Benefits • Benefit for infertile couples: • The chance to have children and thus establish a family • Risks for donors: • Dangers associated with the surgical removal of eggs • Dangers associated with ovulation induction, i.e. ovarian hyperstimulationsyndrome (OHSS) 

  28. Unquantified Risks and Informed Consent 1. Although the risks associated with ovulation induction have been covered in medical literature, but perhaps there is a lack of such coverage in popular literature. This: (a) imposes limits on the potential egg donors' abilities to understand the procedure (b) allows fertility clinics to skirt their obligations to obtain informed consent  Providing donors with information about risks of ovulation induction is essential to obtaining informed consent ***The ethical responsibility of IVF clinics to ensure informed consent is made especially crucial if the recruitment of egg donors occurs among populations already vulnerable for socio-economic and other reasons.

  29. Informed Consent • Informed consent from egg donors would mean they are aware of the associated dangers of ovulation induction and surgical removal of eggs • Obtaining informed consent for any medical procedure has been inadequate for decades • It continues to be a problem that plagues the medical profession

  30. Current Situation in the US • There is no consistent oversight of fertility clinics operating on U.S. soil • Professor Art Caplan, chairman of the Department of Medical Ethics at New York University Langone Medical Center, has dubbed the United States the “Wild West of reproductive technology.”

  31. Current Situation in the World • There is no agency in the U.S. comparable, for example, to the UK Human Fertilization and Embryology Authority, which oversees licensure, accreditation and operating practices of British fertility clinics. • (http://www.hfea.gov.uk/) • Several Western nations such as Italy, Norway, Canada, and the UK, have enacted strict legislation prohibiting some, or all, forms of gamete donation • There is a lack of international standards regarding practices and policies on egg donation • This situation elicits fears about whether women are being treated with respect and dignity and calls into question the fertility industry as a whole 

  32. Reproductive Tourism— A Cousin of Transplant Tourism • “Reproductive tourism” the practice of traveling to another country to receive specific fertility treatment because of legal restrictions in home country, or to obtain the sought procedure or gametes at a lower price (Pennings 2004) • “Reproductive exile” refers to women forced to leave their home countries to access safe, effective, affordable, and legal fertility care. Their choice to use assisted reproductive technologies is voluntary, but their travel abroad is not • “Transplant tourism” isthe practice of traveling to another country to obtain organ transplantation through commercial transactions because of organ shortages/long waiting-lists in home country

  33. Health Risks of Egg Donation The Need for a Donor Registry • There is currently no egg donor registry in the U.S. Consequently, there can be no long-term follow up of: • possible health effects, orlong-term risks of egg donation • There is a national registry for kidney donation • donors can participate in research studies and it is therefore possible to determine long-term risks and effects

  34. Future Directions for Egg Donation • To adopt international standards to govern egg donation, which could eliminate disparities • To increase the available data on the effects of ovary-stimulating drugs • To decrease unquantified risks associated with egg donation and promote informed consent • To codify what does and does not constitute commodification • ***At the very least, the mere exercise of developing such standards will draw much needed attention to this important area of biotechnology and bring the consequent issues to the forefront of public attention

  35. In the US: Donors increasing in number during recessionhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DRxTCRD--yM&feature=related Romanian mother at 66http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q9rtWZrBeV4 Woman gives birth to quadruplets at 65 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nl2fwy16xiM

  36. This has given rise to a set of spectacularly engaging issues: • Is it really okay to treat a woman the way we treat a hen, pumping her up with hormones so we can farm more eggs for sale? • Do the standards we apply to produce ball bearings also apply to the stuff of life and the women who bear it? • Is a human egg a widget and the donor nothing more than a cog?

  37. Thank You for Your Attention

More Related