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PETBioNewsNewsBritish couples can choose baby's sex in US clinic

BioNews

British couples can choose baby's sex in US clinic

Published 1 September 2009 posted in News and appears in BioNews 523

Author

Sarah Pritchard

Image by Alan Handyside via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts a human egg soon after fertilisation, with the two parental pronuclei clearly visible.
CC0 1.0
Image by Alan Handyside via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts a human egg soon after fertilisation, with the two parental pronuclei clearly visible.

A fertility clinic in the USA has revealed that it provides sex selection to many British couples who pay large amounts of money to travel and receive the service....

A fertility clinic in the USA has revealed that it provides sex selection to many British couples who pay large amounts of money to travel and receive the service.


Jeffrey Steinberg opened his clinic in Manhattan, New York, in January of this year and claims that over half of the embryos currently undergoing PGD for ‘family balancing', as it has become known, are British.


‘Britain were the innovators but now they've got handcuffs on. From a medical standpoint, it's a travesty' says Steinberg.


The procedure is currently banned in the UK except for use in screening for genetic diseases such as muscular dystrophy and haemophilia, which usually only affect boys. Each proposed use of PGD must be granted by the British regulatory body, the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA).


Using PGD for this purpose was banned in the 2008 Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act after a public consultation in 2003 revealed 80 per cent of the British public objected to the idea.


The HFEA have warned couples thinking of travelling abroad to receive this service to take time to explore the implications. ‘In the US there is no official regulator. Those who go overseas should make themselves aware of the laws and what impact there may be on any child that is born', said a spokesperson.


The procedure involves the extraction of a single cell from embryos created by IVF. The sex chromosomes in the cell are then found and examined to reveal whether the embryo is male or female. The desired sex of embryo is then implanted into the womb.


Pro-life groups in the USA have condemned the destruction of the embryos found not to be the desired sex.


The cost of receiving PGD in the USA is a big boost for the medical business; it has been estimated at £20,000 after procedures, travel and hotels.


David Karabinns of ‘The Genetics and IVF Institute' in Virginia, USA, who were among the first clinics to offer PGD for family balancing, said: ‘Just as there was an overreaction about IVF, there will be a gradual acceptance as we prove it's safe'. Most US clinics will only treat parents who already have a child of the opposite sex.


Critics of family balancing fear that it will lead to a cultural bias toward one gender and earlier this year the Pope attacked what he called, ‘the obsessive search for the perfect child'.

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Image by Alan Handyside via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts a human egg soon after fertilisation, with the two parental pronuclei clearly visible.
CC0 1.0
Image by Alan Handyside via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts a human egg soon after fertilisation, with the two parental pronuclei clearly visible.
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Image by Peter Artymiuk via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts the shadow of a DNA double helix, on a background that shows the fluorescent banding of the output from a DNA sequencing machine.
CC BY 4.0
Image by Peter Artymiuk via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts the shadow of a DNA double helix, on a background that shows the fluorescent banding of the sequencing output from an automated DNA sequencing machine.
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Image by Bill Sanderson via the Wellcome Collection, © Wellcome Trust Ltd 1997. Depicts the gyri of the Thinker's brain as a maze of choices in biomedical ethics (based on Auguste Rodin's 'The Thinker').
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