Call to end sperm donors’ anonymity

    The Project Group on Assisted Reproduction is
    calling on the government to remove the anonymity given to sperm,
    egg and embryo donors.

    More
    than 2,000 people are born following sperm, egg and embryo donation
    every year, but under the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act
    1990, they have no effective rights to pursue information about
    their status or their donors.

    Progar, a group with
    representatives from organisations such as the British Association
    of Social Workers and the Association of Directors of Social
    Services, wants the government to end the current discriminatory
    practice by removing the “blanket anonymity”. It would also like to
    see a comprehensive record system containing information such as
    medical details of all donors, as well as services for families and
    individuals directly affected by donor-assisted
    treatment.

    “People born through
    donor-assisted conception are the only people in this country who
    are deliberately prevented by the state from knowing the truth
    about their genetic origins,” said Elizabeth Wincott, chairperson
    of Progar.

    “Progar believes that access to
    this information is a basic human right. Without it, fundamental
    questions about individuals’ origins and identity will remain
    unanswered and generations of people will be denied knowledge of
    their genetic history.”

    The
    government is currently consulting over the disclosure of
    information about sperm, egg and embryo donors. Responses are
    required by 1 July.

    – For
    more on donor information go to www.doh.gov.uk/gametedonors

     

    More from Community Care

    Comments are closed.