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Should Women Be Paid for Supplying [Human] Eggs?
Wisconsin State Journal via AP ^ | January 21, 2007 | Malcolm Ritter

Posted on 01/21/2007 2:57:34 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin

Say you're a woman who wants to have fertility treatment but can't afford the cost, which can total many thousands of dollars.

What if you could get the treatment at a substantially reduced rate by agreeing to donate half the eggs you produce for stem-cell research?

Interested?

British women may get a crack at that deal in a few months, under a plan pursued by Dr. Alison Murdoch of Newcastle University.

This concept, which resembles a strategy sometimes used to get eggs for fertility treatment, is just one of several new efforts to boost the supply of human eggs needed for research. The shortage has triggered an ethical debate on both sides of the Atlantic: Should women be paid for supplying eggs?

Scientists need eggs for a process called therapeutic cloning, which creates stem cells genetically matched to an individual.

It may be used someday to create tissue to treat illnesses like diabetes and Parkinson's disease, providing transplant material that's genetically matched to the patient so that it won't be rejected. Therapeutic cloning may also help scientists develop better drug treatments.

The process involves transferring DNA into human eggs and growing them into 5-day- old embryos, from which stem cells are harvested.

It's not clear just how many eggs scientists need for this research. But it is clear that for a woman, donating eggs is a significant undertaking.

Surgical procedure

By various estimates, a woman can spend 40 to 56 hours in medical offices, being interviewed, counseled and subjected to a surgical procedure, under sedation, that retrieves eggs from her body. Before that procedure, she takes hormone injections daily for more than a week to stimulate egg development.

Women donate thousands of eggs in the United States every year to help other women have babies. They are paid. The American Society of Reproductive Medicine doesn't recommend a figure but says $5,000 or more requires some justification and that $10,000 is too much. (In fact, some ads for eggs offer far more.)

The medical group also says it's fine to pay women for producing eggs for stem-cell research. But other guidelines and laws on that topic favor just reimbursing women for expenses.

That's the word from the law books of California and Massachusetts and a committee of the National Research Council, a congressionally chartered nonprofit organization that advises the federal government.

In fact, the compensation question has split American feminists and advocates for reproductive health and rights, said Marcy Darnovsky, associate executive director of the Center for Genetics and Society. One side says offering money beyond reimbursement risks exploiting poor women by offering undue inducement to participate, while the other side calls that stance paternalistic, she said.

In Madison, doctors say the issue hasn't come up because stem-cell research at UW- Madison has relied on leftover embryos from fertility clinics.

"Nobody has requested that we obtain donor eggs for stem- cell research," said Dr. David Olive, with the Wisconsin Fertility Institute in Madison.

Women who donate eggs for others' fertility treatments at Madison fertility clinics are paid about $4,000, said Olive and Lisa Brunette, spokeswoman for UW Hospital.

Darnovsky said her center has no position on paying women to provide eggs for fertility clinics but holds that if women give eggs for stem-cell research, they should only be reimbursed for expenses, including lost wages.

Risks and benefits

Why the difference? It's a matter of a woman's gauging the risks and benefits of donating her eggs, Darnovsky said.

On the risk side, there's been too little follow-up of women to know for sure how safe the egg-retrieval process is, she said.

On the benefit side, while donating eggs to a fertility clinic often produces a baby, the potential payoff in stem cell research is promising but only speculative at the moment, Darnovsky said. But women, like society, have so bought into the expectation of "miracle cures" from stem cells that they overestimate the benefit from donating eggs, she said.

The result? If stem-cell researchers offer the kind of money that fertility clinics do, "I think any woman who's trying to pay the rent and put food on the table, and people who don't have a lot of money to spare, are going to be tempted to discount the risks and overvalue the benefits," she said.

Similarly, ethicist Laurie Zoloth of Northwestern University believes that paying compensation could exploit some women. Women who give eggs to fertility clinics are doing it for the money, she said, and as a society, "we don't . . . want the bodies of the poor used for the needs of the wealthy."

"You do not see many full professors or CEOs selling eggs to secretaries or housecleaners," she said in an e-mail.

Zoloth, who emphasized that she strongly supports stem-cell research that would use the eggs, said she believes women donating eggs for such research should only be reimbursed for expenses. Giving up eggs, like donating organs, should be an altruistic act, she said.

Preventing exploitation

But others believe women should be paid.

Participants in other kinds of biomedical research are compensated for their time, inconvenience and rigors of participating, says Kathy Hudson, director of the Genetics and Public Policy Center at Johns Hopkins University. So why, she asks, should egg donors be treated any differently?

There are ways to guard against exploitation of vulnerable women, she said. One would be for local boards that oversee research to make sure that donors are recruited from a wide variety of groups rather than just the poor, she said. And limits can be set on the number of times any one woman can participate, she said.

Dr. Norm Fost, director of medical ethics at UW-Madison, said women who donate eggs for stem-cell research should be paid an amount "in the same ballpark" as those who donate for fertility treatments, because they are undergoing the same risks.

Record is mixed

So far, the track record for altruistic donations is mixed. On one hand, hundreds of women volunteered to donate eggs in South Korea for research by the now-disgraced scientist Hwang Woo-suk, who fraudulently claimed success in therapeutic cloning.

But Dr. Robert Lanza, vice president of research and scientific development at Advanced Cell Technology Inc. of Alameda, Calif., said he has given up trying to get donations without compensation. After more than a year of pursuing that strategy and about 100 advertisements, ACT was able to get only one woman to donate eggs, he said in an e-mail.

And Kevin Eggan of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, who's been seeking eggs since May in return for reimbursing out-of- pocket expenses, said recently that the effort had generated some calls but no donors yet. The approach must be given more time to work, he said.

Murdoch, who also directs a fertility treatment center in Newcastle upon Tyne, said that when her lab asked fertility- clinic patients to donate eggs, it received only 66 over seven months. That's just not enough, she said.

20 eggs per week

In contrast, if her new plan attracts two women a week - chosen because they appear likely to produce lots of eggs - it would provide 20 eggs each week. That's still not a lot, but the supply should be steady, she said.

Her "egg-sharing" plan resembles an arrangement that's used occasionally at fertility clinics. In that plan, a woman shares her eggs and treatment costs with another woman who wants a baby.

Murdoch's group has permission from Britain's Human Fertilization and Embryology Authority to set up the arrangement for stem-cell research.

Now it's a question of raising money to finance it. Murdoch said she hopes to start offering the deal to British women in a few months, and that she has already heard from dozens of women eager to participate.

Though the HFEA approved Murdoch's plans in July, it has since started gathering public and expert opinions on whether egg sharing should be permitted. "If the consensus is that this is not a good idea, we can change the policy, and rescind the license," said John Paul Maytum, an HFEA spokesman.

The idea has drawn some opposition.

Hudson said it would appeal to women of limited means who are "desperately trying to get pregnant" and offers the possibility of a baby in return for eggs. "How is that not undue influence?" she asked. "How can that possibly be OK, and it's not OK to compensate a normal, healthy volunteer?"

Murdoch says that as long as women provide informed consent, she believes that egg- sharing is no different from standard medical practices, such as giving blood or participating in drug trials.

"It almost becomes a feminist issue," said Murdoch. "I would take exception to the fact that society feels that women need to be protected from themselves."

Other sources

Some stem-cell scientists are skirting the debate by finding other sources of eggs.

Dr. George Daley of Harvard's stem-cell institute announced in June that he would use eggs originally produced for fertility treatment but which failed to become fertilized. Usually, such eggs are discarded, but women in the fertility program Daley works with must agree to their use in research.

In any case, the need for eggs may only be temporary.

They are, in fact, only a tool to reprogram the inserted DNA so that it will drive the development of an early embryo. Scientists hope to learn enough about that reprogramming process to let them take an ordinary cell from a person and use it to produce other kinds of cells, perhaps without going through an embryo stage. That might happen in 10 years, Murdoch estimated.

And then they wouldn't need eggs any more.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: abortion; frankenstein; geneticcannibalism; ivf; moralabsolutes; organharvesting; organsforsale
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1 posted on 01/21/2007 2:57:35 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

Ya gotta love the Brave New World.


2 posted on 01/21/2007 3:00:10 PM PST by Kozak (Anti Shahada: " There is no God named Allah, and Muhammed is his False Prophet")
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

"20 eggs per week"

Heck of a chicken....oh, I'm suppose to read the article....?


3 posted on 01/21/2007 3:01:31 PM PST by dakine
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

We don't pay chickens, do we?


4 posted on 01/21/2007 3:02:44 PM PST by Jeff Chandler ("... without victory there is no survival." - Winston Churchill)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

If a woman is selling her eggs for reproductive purposes, not research, would she charge extra for in-vitro fertilization ?


5 posted on 01/21/2007 3:05:39 PM PST by HarmlessLovableFuzzball
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To: Diana in Wisconsin
Should Women Be Paid for Supplying Eggs?

Doctor, my wife thinks she's a duck?

6 posted on 01/21/2007 3:06:23 PM PST by zarf
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To: dakine

Actually, it's one egg every 72 hours for a productive and 'at her peak' laying hen. Ask me how I know. (No, don't!) LOL!


7 posted on 01/21/2007 3:11:16 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (Save The Earth. It's The Only Planet With Chocolate.)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

8 posted on 01/21/2007 3:13:06 PM PST by mirkwood (good gun control is a sharp eye and a steady hand)
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To: mirkwood

Oh, now that's just MEAN! ;)


9 posted on 01/21/2007 3:17:44 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (Save The Earth. It's The Only Planet With Chocolate.)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

Another step toward the commodification of human beings.


10 posted on 01/21/2007 3:18:10 PM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

If you are a 5'9' Harvard ,Princeton, Yale Stanford, or MIT Undergraduate Coed who is attractive you can sell your ova to wealthy infertile couples for 60,000 to 100,000 dollars. The only other requirement is you be free from familial inherited diseases. In the trade they are called " Blue Ribbon Egg Donors"

http://www.stanfordalumni.org/news/magazine/2000/novdec/articles/eggdonor.html


11 posted on 01/21/2007 3:20:26 PM PST by tomcorn
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To: Cicero

Human beings became commodities once we got kicked out of Eden.


12 posted on 01/21/2007 3:21:30 PM PST by tomcorn
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

A woman selling her eggs is, by definition, committing a sexual act for money. She is therefore a prostitute.


13 posted on 01/21/2007 3:21:51 PM PST by 2harddrive (...House a TOTAL Loss.....)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

But, maybe prostitution should be legal in places other than 10 counties in Nevada.


14 posted on 01/21/2007 3:22:47 PM PST by 2harddrive (...House a TOTAL Loss.....)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

I can hardly wait to hear the arguments of the gender-egalitarians on this topic.


15 posted on 01/21/2007 3:26:22 PM PST by Graymatter
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To: Diana in Wisconsin
Should Women Be Paid for Supplying [Human] Eggs?

What are they for, making special omelets?

I guess these researchers believe the old adage "you need to break a few eggs to make an omelet."

Frankenstein all over again...

16 posted on 01/21/2007 3:27:13 PM PST by Sir Francis Dashwood (LET'S ROLL!)
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To: tomcorn

It might be worth that much money for an infertile couple that wants to have a child - I wonder how many eggs were sold last year at those kind of prices?


17 posted on 01/21/2007 3:38:38 PM PST by Howard Jarvis Admirer (Howard Jarvis, the foe of the tax collector and friend of the California homeowner)
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To: Howard Jarvis Admirer

Student Newspapers at those schools usually contain at least four or five such queries from couples seeking "donors". I don't know how it is arranged other than that. I suspect there are probably some legal ramifications and dodges to get this done. I assume it follows market principles. A notional donor who is 5'9,blond , blue eyed, gorgeous and a 4.0 Chemistry major who grandparents and great grandparents lived into their 90's would command high prices.


18 posted on 01/21/2007 3:47:16 PM PST by tomcorn
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

This is the most appalling breach of ethics in science and medicine since sperm donation.

The human species has outsourced it's destiny.


19 posted on 01/21/2007 3:53:01 PM PST by sodpoodle (Official Thread Nanny)
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To: sodpoodle

Hey....this is relatively good. Some of these couples hire surrogates in Canada to carry the fertilized ova. So 100K for a blue ribbon egg donor. a surrogate for 50K. 150k and 150k for medical support...Bingo bango...you got instant family for 300K. Got a million bucks you can do this three times...


20 posted on 01/21/2007 4:05:47 PM PST by tomcorn
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