In vitro fertilization
 Search     for          [ Advanced Search ]


    Browse   Add Article/Listing   What's Top   What's New   Featured   Tell a Friend   FAQ



  Categories

    News (877)
    Jobs & Resumes (41)
    Image Database (204)
    IVF Mail (598)
    Reviews (60)
    Links (95)
    Books & Videos (49)
    Clinics (207)
    Embryology courses (30)
    Tutorials (8)
    Writers (4)


  Sponsors

1.  ac-tive (IVF)
2.  CRi (Oosight)
3.  Cryolock
4.  Hamilton Thorne Research
5.  IVFonline
6.  K-SYSTEMS
7.  MediCult
8.  Mellowood Medical
9.  Research Instruments
10.  Vitrolife
11.  Zander IVF


  Clinic Sponsors

1.  Jinemed Hospital, Turkey


  Featured Listings


A Textbook of In Vitro Fertilization and Assisted Reproduction: The Bourn Hall Guide to Clinical and Laboratory Practice: Includes Bourn Hall Protocols on CD-ROM, Third Edition



Acidified Tyrodes Solution



  Online Now

Welcome, guest !
We have 0 members
and 40 guests online


  Recently Viewed

1.  First egg bank to open in the UK


  IVF Support

1.  Resolve
2.  Infertility Network UK
3.  American Infertility Association
4.  Egg Freezing
5.  Fertility Connect
6.  e-Infertility Network
7.  INCIID
8.  NISIG – Ireland


  IVF Tutorials

 
IVF


IVF > News

First egg bank to open in the UK

Dr. Kirsty Horsey
Progress Educational Trust
02 December 2004
Discuss this article Read comments Add to favorites

[BioNews, London] The UK's first 'human egg bank' is set to open this week, according to an article published in the Mail on Sunday newspaper. It is said that the bank will store and offer for sale 'more than 1500 frozen eggs', which 'infertile couples can buy for their hereditary characteristics such as their eye and hair colour and height', enabling them to create 'made-to-order' babies'. It is illegal for clinics to sell eggs, sperm or embryos in the UK, but patients can pay for private fertility treatment using donated materials.

The new egg bank has been created, says the paper, by Mohammed Taranissi, director of the Assisted Reproduction and Gynaecology Centre in London. He has built up the store of eggs over five years, using donations from women attending his clinic for fertility treatments. Twenty-two clinics in the UK are licensed to freeze eggs in the UK, but donated eggs are scarce. Some clinics offer 'egg-sharing' schemes, where a woman who needs fertility treatment receives it at a reduced price in return for donating some of her eggs to another woman or couple. But egg-sharing usually involves the synchronisation of the two women's cycles and the use of fresh, rather than frozen, eggs. The main reason that egg freezing is used is for women about to undergo a medical procedure that might affect their fertility. It was only in 2001 that the first birth using a frozen-thawed human egg was achieved.

The egg bank has already received a lot of criticism. The UK's General Medical Council (GMC) said that not enough was known about the procedure, or about human development, to be assured that 'a potential health time bomb was not being produced'. Professor Lord Robert Winston, a fertility expert, said that the project 'stinks', adding that it 'is generally dangerous. There is no evidence that egg freezing is safe'. However, Dr Gill Lockwood, director of a Midlands fertility clinic and chairman of the British Fertility Society's ethics committee, said that she is 'happy with the concept of egg freezing'. But, she added, 'the success rate with fresh eggs is significantly greater than with frozen and I would be unhappy to reduce the chance of success using this precious resource by freezing eggs'.

Taranissi claims that couples who opt to use eggs from the egg bank will have almost a 50 per cent chance of conceiving each time they undergo treatment. 'There is a misconception that egg freezing doesn't work', he said, adding 'I disagree. If you freeze good quality eggs, you can do very well with them'.



http://www.BioNews.org.uk
BioNews@progress.org.uk
© Copyright 2008 Progress Educational Trust

Reproduced from BioNews with permission, a web- and email-based source of news, information and comment on assisted reproduction and human genetics, published by Progress Educational Trust.


Page Views: 9767

 

Average Visitor Rating:    4.46 (out of 5)
Number of Ratings: 11 Votes
Rate This Article:
 Visitor comments (2)
Discuss this article Write a comment

I think that needs must, and if you want a baby that bad you will concider anything, those not in that circumstance shouldnt be so quick to judge
16 March 2007 - karen


I couldn't agree more, I had my little boy through IVF and he is everything to me. I would love to have another child but with my current situation this will only be possible via IVF and sperm donation as I am now single, does anyone know of any schemes out there which could help?
25 April 2007 - Amanda Disley







  IVF Jobs



IVF Jobs | Resumes

Click here to post your
job announcement



  Latest Listings

1.  UK MPs debate new fertilisation and embryology laws
2.  IVF News Update
3.  Hudson Valley Fertility opens State of the Art IVF and Fertility Center
4.  IVF does not lead to early menopause
5.  'Capsule' could cut costs and time of IVF


  Featured



  IVF Newsletter

Subscribe for the latest IVF news and announcements.
name
email
add   remove  


  Most Popular

1.  IVF success rates from US show age is all important
2.  IVF twins in demand
3.  Romanian woman set to become world's oldest mother
4.  First egg bank to open in the UK
5.  A New Option-In Vitro Maturation of Human Oocytes IVM??


  Talk to us



Name:  

E-mail:  




Search Listings | Place Listings | Edit Listings | My Profile | My Favorites | Auto Notify | Sitemap | FAQ |
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Tell Your Friends | Refund Policy | ROR/RSS | Sponsorship and Advertising


embryo
Copyright © 1997-2008, IVF.net. All Rights Reserved.