Literature DB >> 16859369

Embryo disposal practices in IVF clinics in the United States.

Andrea D Gurmankin1, Dominic Sisti, Arthur L Caplan.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The moral status of the human embryo is particularly controversial in the United States, where one debate has centered on embryos created in excess at in vitro fertilization (IVF) clinics. Little has been known about the disposal of these embryos.
METHODS: We mailed anonymous, self-administered questionnaires to directors of 341 American IVF clinics.
RESULTS: 217 of 341 clinics (64 percent) responded. Nearly all (97 percent) were willing to create and cryopreserve extra embryos. Fewer, but still a majority (59 percent), were explicitly willing to avoid creating extras. When embryos did remain in excess, clinics offered various options: continual cryopreservation for a charge (96 percent) or for no charge (4 percent), donation for reproductive use by other couples (76 percent), disposal prior to (60 percent) or following (54 percent) cryopreservation, and donation for research (60 percent) or embryologist training (19 percent). Qualifications varied widely among those personnel responsible for securing couples' consent for disposal and for conducting disposal itself. Some clinics performed a religious or quasi-religious disposal ceremony. Some clinics required a couple's participation in disposal; some allowed but did not require it; some others discouraged or disallowed it.
CONCLUSIONS: The disposal of human embryos created in excess at American IVF clinics varies in ways suggesting both moral sensitivity and ethical divergence.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Empirical Approach; Genetics and Reproduction

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 16859369     DOI: 10.1017/s0730938400006614

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Politics Life Sci        ISSN: 0730-9384


  4 in total

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Authors:  Felicia Cohn
Journal:  Cancer Treat Res       Date:  2010

2.  Fertility patients' views about frozen embryo disposition: results of a multi-institutional U.S. survey.

Authors:  Anne Drapkin Lyerly; Karen Steinhauser; Corrine Voils; Emily Namey; Carolyn Alexander; Brandon Bankowski; Robert Cook-Deegan; William C Dodson; Elena Gates; Emily S Jungheim; Peter G McGovern; Evan R Myers; Barbara Osborn; William Schlaff; Jeremy Sugarman; James A Tulsky; David Walmer; Ruth R Faden; Edward Wallach
Journal:  Fertil Steril       Date:  2008-12-05       Impact factor: 7.329

Review 3.  The ethics of human-embryoids model: a call for consistency.

Authors:  Paola Nicolas; Fred Etoc; Ali H Brivanlou
Journal:  J Mol Med (Berl)       Date:  2021-04-01       Impact factor: 4.599

4.  Patients' attitudes towards the surplus frozen embryos in China.

Authors:  Xuan Jin; GongXian Wang; SiSun Liu; Ming Liu; Jing Zhang; YuFa Shi
Journal:  Biomed Res Int       Date:  2012-12-26       Impact factor: 3.411

  4 in total

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