Category Archives: Fertility Tourism

Fertility tourism and the new human trafficking

Fertility tourism is a growing global industry, bringing in over $400 million a year in India alone. For the right price, people can buy IVF treatments, donated eggs and sperm along with a surrogate mother. The clients are often white and rich. The suppliers pressed into service are often neither.

In Margaret Attwood’s ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’, a class of women exist solely to give birth to other’s children. Their bodies are no longer their own, but a commodity in perpetual servitude to richer, ruling classes.

This fantasy is more real than imagined when you consider the case of Gammy, born with Down Syndrome, separated from his twin and left to live in poverty with his surrogate mother, Pattharamon Janbua, in Thailand. Janbua has become the 21st Century Handmaid, the face of impoverished fertility offered at a price to the rich and most often white customers.

Gammy and Janbua’s case highlights the inequality of fertility tourism for what it is: the new face of human trafficking.

As always, the most powerful people will always be those with the most money but the question must be asked: what are they buying and is it ethical? By using money and vulnerability as a means to coerce women into exploitative service, fertility tourism is an abuse of power that reduces the trafficked from people into produce.

Based on the UN’s definition of human trafficking, fertility tourism often results in human trafficking by recruiting people by through coercion, twisting power and vulnerability and giving payments that result in physical exploitation.

According to Janbua, already a mother, the surrogacy fees promised were 350,000 baht (A$11,669) which far exceeded the 20,000 baht (A$666) she and her husband struggled to live off every month. Janbua entered into the agreement by the force of poverty, telling reporters “my husband agreed because we didn’t have money to pay our debt”. She also claims she has not been fully paid.

She’s not alone.

As an industry that relies on the labour of women, it doesn’t always treat them well. In India, women’s groups are campaigning against deceptive agents pressing young women into service and signing contracts they can’t read. Many surrogate mothers are separated from their families to live in quarantined hostels with other women while others go into seclusion fearing social shame. There are cases of women dying during childbirth. This is the reality hidden from the pristine white clinics and smiling hosts promoted on websites.

Baby1CT17aug2014

On surrogacy forums, where questions about personal experience are continually punctuated by offers of assistance by surrogacy agents eager to broker a new deal, people talk about God’s will helping them have a baby instead of their wallets. Surrogate mothers become nameless broodmares spoken of as objects and not individuals, reduced to a sum of parts from their womb to their donated eggs. One woman advises people to inspect the surrogate mothers because if they’re from the Ukraine they’ll be contaminated by Chernobyl and that “if you see the [Indian] surrogate mother consider yourself lucky. Maybe better not to see.”

The implications of it “better not to see” a surrogate mother or to reduce them to produce potentially spoiled by nuclear accident speaks volumes of how easily people can disregard others when money is involved.

The popularity of fertility tourism shows that the world can still devise unique ways to literally sell a woman’s body to the highest bidder. As with all forms of human trafficking, we must find a way to look past our mania for cheap labour and look to the real cost of what we are buying.

This is no way to start a life and it’s no way to respect the lives of others.

Source: SBS Australia
source: http://www.eturbonews.com / eTN Global Travel Industry News / by Amy Gray / August 05th, 2014

Baby on board: Irish ‘fertility tourists’ look for help abroad

Nicole Kidman and her children

Nicole Kidman and her children

Hundreds of Irish couples who desperately want to start a family are going to Spain, Denmark and the Czech 
Republic in a new wave of fertility tourism.

They are shunning Irish clinics in favour of seeking fertility treatments abroad to start a family. And they have been joined by same-sex couples as well as single women who want to conceive before it is too late.

Enquiries for overseas fertility treatments have increased by 59pc in the past six months alone, according to new research by the private healthcare search engine, WhatClinic.com.

The numbers of Irish people enquiring about IVF procedures in the Czech Republic has increased by a whopping 465pc in the last 12 months, with requests for information about the same treatment in Spain more than doubling during this period.

Denmark and the Czech Republic are popular not just in terms of advanced treatments but also because donors are likely to be close enough to our Celtic colouring, which is considered important in areas such as egg and sperm donation.

Meanwhile in Ireland, IVF enquires have dropped by more than a fifth this year. As well as Denmark, Spain, and the Czech Republic, the United States is also a destination of choice.

Fertility treatments such as IVF have become increasingly popular in recent years, with a number of well-known mums like Brooke Shields , Christie Brinkley  and Nicole Kidman  all speaking openly about how it helped them to conceive.

One round of IVF in Ireland costs on average €4,662. However, in the Czech Republic, patients are paying €2,651. And with many couples needing several attempts at IVF before it is successful, the cost of the treatment can become a major factor.

While the average cost of IVF in Spain is higher than in Ireland, at an average of €4,800, it is believed that Spain’s reputation as a leader in this highly specialised medical area has made it an attractive destination for Irish fertility patients.

However, Dr John Waterstone, Medical Director of the Cork Fertility Clinic, believes that while a small number of Irish people may be travelling for IVF, the biggest draw are overseas egg banks, which are not available here.

“There are a smaller number travelling for IVF treatment because there is the perception that it is cheaper abroad,” he explained.

“The Czech Republic is a big destination for that, but by the time you factor in travelling and staying somewhere, then it may be that it’s not actually that much cheaper at all. The big reason why women from Ireland are going abroad for fertility treatment is for egg donation, where their eggs are not of a good enough quality to conceive.

“Egg donation is one thing that we can’t do adequately in Ireland at the moment because we don’t have a supply of anonymous egg donors,” 
Dr Waterstone added.

“So we have a link with a clinic in Spain, where our patients go. Some of our patients will also go to the United States because the success rate is extremely high for egg donation there. We are linked with a clinic in the States where they will actually guarantee you a baby or your money back.”

WhatClinic.com says Irish enquiries for egg donation in the Czech Republic have tripled in the last year, with enquiries for the same services in Spain rising by a third.

“The internet has made IVF treatment abroad more accessible and more appealing,” said Declan Keane , Director, Senior Clinical Embryologist with ReproMed Ireland.

“What’s making them go abroad mainly is to access services, which they could not avail of in Ireland up to quite recently, such as donor sperm. So they were travelling abroad to access the sperm banks, but that is all accessible in Ireland now through ReproMed and clinics like us,” Mr Keane said.

“There are no egg banks in Ireland, but certainly we can assist those services through Spain,” Mr Keane added.

“I feel that you are better off staying in Ireland for IVF services and then for donor eggs, we can now freeze the man’s sperm, fly it out, create the embryos and you can even have your embryos brought back into Ireland.”

Mr Keane disagrees with a perception that Irish people are travelling overseas because they feel these clinics have more experience and expertise than fertility clinics in Ireland.

“It’s not that they see the services as being better outside, I think people see it as being cheaper or they are accessing a service they cannot get here,” he explained.

“I think the services in Ireland are excellent.”

However, Mr Keane did concede that there are treatments available elsewhere, including IVF-related procedures, which have not 
yet been introduced in Ireland.

“People will go across the borders to access IVF treatment, where some of the newer techniques haven’t yet hit Ireland,” he said.

“In Ireland we kind of watch what happens; are they successful? Are they viable? Is there any increased risk of abnormalities in the babies? Then we’ll take on those research services. And some people will say ‘look, I just need to access those now, so I’m going.'”

According to one 33-year-old woman, who had two failed IVF procedures in Ireland before going to Spain, where the procedure was finally a success, Irish people are travelling for more than financial reasons and egg donation.

“The main reason for going abroad was to avail of the expertise that clinics with higher patient turnovers have to offer,” she explained.

“Because there are lower numbers doing IVF here, you get the sense that the expertise and the most up-to-date treatment options might not be available.

“I know a few girls my age, who like me, went abroad after two failed cycles. All of us conceived abroad using our own eggs.”

Another woman (37), who is 20 weeks pregnant after travelling to Prague for her third IVF treatment, is more critical of Ireland’s fertility sector.

“It was for male fertility that we went. I always felt that my husband needed a procedure done and they wouldn’t listen to me here, so I asked them in Prague to do it. That operation is the only reason I’m pregnant,” she said.

Sunday Independent

source: http://www.independent.ie / Sunday Independent / Home> Health / by Joanna Kiernan / August 03rd, 2014

 

Fertility Tourism : Couples desperate for a baby heading overseas

The Ashcrofts were the first New Zealand couple to take advantage of commercial surrogacy laws in India, which is only one of a handful of countries that allow surrogates to be paid. As a result of the 2002 law, lower costs, increasing medical infrastructure and the availability of surrogates, the country has emerged as a hotspot for this type of fertility tourism. International surrogacy, also legal in the United States, Thailand, the Ukraine and at least one state in Mexico, is a growing trend for couples and singles, both gay and straight, seeking ways to overcome the hurdles biological, technological, financial, and legal of having children. The subject was the hot topic at the fifth Congress of the Asia Pacific Initiative on Reproduction (ASPIRE Conference) in Brisbane this month. Closer to home members of the Law Society heard presentations from fertility specialists on the issue last week. Fertility Associates group operations manager Dr John Peek says New Zealand had always aligned itself ethically with European standards but with the amount of reproductive technology exploding in Asia it could no longer be ignored. “There’s going to be a lot more reproductive tourism in this part of the world,” Dr Peek says.

Using a surrogate

Surrogacy is where a woman, who cannot carry a baby, uses another woman to bear the child. An embryo, created using IVF, is transferred to the surrogate. Commercial surrogacy, where women are paid to carry and deliver someone else’s baby, is only available in a handful of countries including the US, Thailand and India. Surrogacy is available in NZ but the time and cost to gain ethics committee approval, and the limited number of surrogates, mean some parents choose to pay an overseas surrogate. India has become a hot spot for this type of fertility tourism, thought to generate the country $400 million a year. About 3000 clinics offer surrogacy services and 2000 foreign babies are born annually in India to surrogates. Five couples from New Zealand have pursued surrogacy in India, four with success while the other is still at the IVF treatment stage. The costs, in the tens of thousands of dollars, vary considerably but India and Thailand are cheaper than the US. In 2011-2012, there were eight applications for surrogacy in New Zealand, seven of which were approved. Between 2005 and 2011, surrogacy applications approved by NZ’s ethics committee resulted in 33 births.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/lifestyle/news/article.cfm?c_id=6&objectid=11238149

The baby makers: Critics push for regulation of India’s booming surrogacy industry
ABC News 15 April 2014
The calls come as increasing numbers of foreigners, including many Australians, pay thousands of dollars to Indian surrogacy centres to fulfil their need to have children.

The industry has been criticised for operating in a regulatory vacuum, and while there are some rules for people who take the journey to India, it is still a minefield for many unsuspecting parents.

Author and critic Kishwar Desai has strong reservations about the lack of legal oversight and what it means for the women who rent out their wombs.

“We’re treating these women like animals, like you would do with cattle … so I think that is something we need to be very careful about,” she said.

“It’s not the numbers of the women who die – and indeed we may not even know about them because a lot of the clinics are operating without any regulation, without any rules, without any scrutinies – we may not even hear about them. The women may be allowed to just go home and die there.”
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-04-15/babymakers-critics-push-for-regulation-india-surrogacy/5389678

source: http://www.familyfirst.org.nz / Family First New Zealand / Home / by NZ Herald – April 15th, 2014

B’lore is firmly on Medical Tourism Map

BlrMedTourismCT11feb2014

It was in 2001 that I moved to Canada with my family. Four years later, we moved to the United States. But I decided to come to Bangalore for a special connection that I established with it almost 25 years ago.

In 1994, I met with an accident and broke my hand. It was a Bangalore-based doctor who fixed it and he did a great job. His kindness and helping nature touched my heart, and I started referring to him patients, most of whom could not afford a high fee, and he never asked them to pay.

Last year, I met with another car accident and my left knee was damaged. While my right knee compensated, it was damaged, too. I had to get a knee replacement. Although I was in the US, I knew who the best doctor for me was. I enquired about my insurance and they told me that they don’t reimburse for expenses incurred outside the country. I still chose to visit my doctor in Bangalore, and my surgery that was performed in July 2013 was successful. Three weeks later, I started walking. After three months, I was able to sit cross-legged on the floor.

Now, I can move about and work to keep myself busy. People in Bangalore were so warm that I never felt like a patient – I felt as if I received VIP treatment. I love my Bangalore.

There is a perception that West has the best healthcare systems. My experience shows that we have the best-skilled people here with world standards.

We have the best doctors and some of the best hospitals and we need to make use of them. I had a great time here with friends and family.

I want people all over the world to be aware of the abundance in Bangalore. Everybody should come and visit Bangalore, whether as a tourist or as a patient like me.

We have to promote Bangalore in as many ways as possible. I have a dream, which is to see people walking without pain, especially the less-privileged. I am sure I can do it with the help of the excellent doctors here as it’s the best medical tourist destination.

While here, I also discovered Vidyarthi Bhavan dosa and fell in love with its dosa. The combination of good food and great friends in this city makes me want to keep coming back. In spite of having lived in Canada and the US, Bangalore is the best.

(The writer, who lived in Lakkasandra, is resident of United States)

my Bangalore

Likes

   My friends here

   Vidyarthi Bhavan

   Doctors and hospitals

   Weather

   Commercial Street

Dislikes

   Traffic

   Bad Roads

   Poor urban planning

   Scarcity of water

   Rising costs

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Bangalore / by Radha Acharya – Bangalore / February 01st, 2014

Maternity tourism: Pregnant foreigners flying to UK in droves

Image via wordpress.com

Image via wordpress.com

London, England :

More than 300 women who were about to give birth were stopped at Gatwick in a two year period, according to a government report.

Most of the women received treatment on the NHS after being deemed to close to giving birth to return home.

The total exploiting the health service is thought to much higher, as Gatwick has a limited number of flights from countries with the highest rate of so-called health tourists.

Despite airlines usually not allowing mothers-to-be who are more than 36 weeks pregnant to fly, the women were able to gain entrance to the UK by using forged doctors notes which hid how far along they were.

The already stretched health service is set to come under even more pressure next week when labor market restrictions are lifted and thousands of Romanian and Bulgarian immigrants are predicted to flood the UK.

The revelation comes from a previously unpublished report seen by the Sunday Telegraph which was prepared in 2010, outlining plans to refuse those with unpaid NHS entry to Britain.

Another report included quotes from an immigration officer, who was furious at the extent of the problem.

He said: “Sometimes they will come back for their second or third baby.

“Sometimes they will quite blatantly say, ‘I’m coming because the care is better’, and once they are here, if they are assessed to a certain gestation, then we are stuck.”

Health tourism costs the NHS up to £80 million a year – enough to pay for around 2,000 nurses – the Government has said.

Source: eturbonews.com / eTN Global Travel Industry News / London, England / source: express.co.uk / Europe & Israel / December 29th, 2013