Literature DB >> 21114072

Fertility tourism: circumventive routes that enable access to reproductive technologies and substances.

Sven Bergmann1.   

Abstract

Fertility tourism” is a journalistic eye‐catcher focusing on the phenomenon of patients who search for a reproductive treatment in another country in order to circumvent laws, access restrictions, or waiting lists in their home country. In Europe, the reasons why people seek reproductive treatments outside their national boundaries are quite diverse, in part because regulations differ so much among countries. Beginning with four examples of people who crossed borders for an in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatment with gamete donation, this article provides some insight into these transnational circumvention practices based on material from ethnographic fieldwork and interviews in Spain, Denmark, and the Czech Republic. In all three countries, gamete donation is made strictly anonymous. Clinical practices such as egg donor recruitment and phenotypical matching between donors and recipients serve to naturalize the substitution of gametes and to install social legitimacy through resemblance markers with the prospective child. In comparison to other areas of medical tourism, which are subjects of debate as a consequence of neoliberal health politics and international medical competition, mobility in the area of reproductive technologies is deeply intertwined with new forms of doing kinship. For prospective parents, it holds a promise of generating offspring who could pass as biogenetically conceived children. Therefore, IVF with gamete donation is mostly modeled after conceptions of nature. Through anonymity and concealment it creates forms of nonrelatedness that leave space for future imaginings and traces of transnational genetic creators.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21114072     DOI: 10.1086/655978

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Signs (Chic)        ISSN: 0097-9740


  7 in total

1.  Conscientious objection to abortion: how to strike a legal and ethical balance between conflicting rights?

Authors:  Francesca Negro; Maria Cristina Varone; Alessandro Del Rio; Susanna Marinelli; Giuseppe Basile
Journal:  Acta Biomed       Date:  2022-08-31

2.  "I didn't have to prove to anybody that I was a good candidate": a case study framing international bariatric tourism by Canadians as circumvention tourism.

Authors:  Carly Jackson; Jeremy Snyder; Valorie A Crooks; M Ruth Lavergne
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2018-07-20       Impact factor: 2.655

3.  Reprowebs: a conceptual approach to elasticity and change in the global assisted reproduction industry.

Authors:  Anika König; Heather Jacobson
Journal:  Biosocieties       Date:  2021-10-09

Review 4.  Reproductive travel to, from and within sub-Saharan Africa: A scoping review.

Authors:  Tessa Moll; Trudie Gerrits; Karin Hammarberg; Lenore Manderson; Andrea Whittaker
Journal:  Reprod Biomed Soc Online       Date:  2022-02-05

5.  Who can take advantage of medically assisted reproduction in Germany?

Authors:  Katja Köppen; Heike Trappe; Christian Schmitt
Journal:  Reprod Biomed Soc Online       Date:  2021-06-17

6.  Romanian IVF: a brief history through the 'lens' of labour, migration and global egg donation markets.

Authors:  Michal Rachel Nahman
Journal:  Reprod Biomed Soc Online       Date:  2016-07-19

7.  About gladiators and a sacred disease.

Authors:  Aila Akosua Kattner
Journal:  Biomed J       Date:  2022-03-23       Impact factor: 7.892

  7 in total

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