By admin on February 15, 2012

In December of 2011, Ryan and I made three presentations at the 14th Conference on Human Reproduction in Melbourne. Many parts of Australia have acknowledged the rights of donor offspring, and have policies in place so that offspring are able to connect with their donors and half siblings, but some still import sperm from US sperm banks that continue to use anonymous donors and have no practice in place for adequately tracking births, and updating and sharing medical information. Even the “open” donors at some US sperm banks have the option to deny contact when a child turns 18, some change their minds about contact, and some become unreachable after 18 years- there are just no guarantees here. And Australians (and those from other countries around the world that import US sperm)  who choose US donors have no way of knowing if their donor helped to produce 50 or 150 children, and if there are medical issues amongst the families or donor.

Overseas Sperm Donors – Is This What We Want Or Need?

Presentations at the 14th World Congress on Human Reproduction held recently in Melbourne were not supportive of clinics importing donor sperm from overseas sperm banks.

PRLog (Press Release) – Feb 14, 2012 –
During the 14th World Congress on Human Reproduction, Wendy Kramer of the Donor Sibling Registry in the USA (from where some of the donor sperm is imported to Australia), says that some sperm banks in the United States have treated donor families unethically, and that it is time to consider new legislation.

Ms. Kramer said, “Just as it’s happened in many other countries around the world, we need to publicly ask the questions ‘What is in the best interests of the child to be born?’ and ‘Is it fair to bring a child into the world who will have no access to knowing about one half of their genetics, medical history and ancestry?’

“These sperm banks are keeping donors anonymous and making a lot of money. But nowhere in that formula is doing what’s right for the donor families.”

Denise Donati, Director of Fertility Solutions Sunshine Coast and Bundaberg said Fertility Solutions has a strong opinion about importing donor sperm and has a clinic policy not to import from overseas. Instead, FSSC has put considerable time and money into recruiting local donors.

Donati had this to say: “At Fertility Solutions we are more focused on being able to facilitate future contact between the donor and any offspring. We do not believe that importing donor semen from overseas supports this.”

Donati said it was very clear from presentations at the recent World Congress, that donor sperm imported from overseas often did not meet the requirements as set out by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), even if they say they do.

“Importing donor sperm is the easy option and something we thought long and hard about at Fertility Solutions” says Donati. “Once our team of nurses, scientists, doctors, and counselors had sat down and talked more about this option, it became clear that it did not fit with the clinic’s ethics on children born from donor sperm having a right to know of their biological origins when they reach the age of 18 – if not before.”

Donati said she heard Ms. Kramer present information on how “unregulated” many of the sperm banks in the USA are, despite the fact they often state otherwise. “This only confirmed my belief that Fertility Solutions was doing the right thing only recruiting and using local sperm donors,” Donati said.

Donati reports that Ms. Kramer spoke of an article in the Journal of the American Medical Association where a sperm donor who had no knowledge of an underlying heart disease had donated to a sperm bank over a 2 year period from 1990 to 1991. In 1995, he was diagnosed with a heart disease known as Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM). The occurrence of HCM is a significant cause of sudden unexpected cardiac death in any age group. Nine of the donors twenty four children (twenty two donor kids, two with his wife) have been identified as having HCM (eight of the donor children and one of those produced with his wife). Whilst this can happen in any population, what was the most disturbing was that the authors of the paper stated that no accepted guidelines presently exist (in the USA) for the process of notification, counseling, and offspring evaluation, after a genetic disease is identified due to gamete (sperm or egg) donation (in the USA).

Ms. Kramer noted in her presentation the case of a sperm donor who reportedly has 150 children. And it seems that it doesn’t stop there with some of the donors going to other clinics to donate all over again.

“This is unacceptable” says Donati, “how can Australian clinics who are importing donor sperm be absolutely sure that the criteria set down by the NHMRC is being met. It’s not a chance that we are willing to take. The moral, ethical, and legal ramifications are significant and the impact far reaching not only to the donor, the recipients and child but also the extended families of all parties.

Donati said these reports alone should make clinics that are importing donor sperm from overseas sit up and take notice and reassess their position. “It should not be about money or ease of access but instead about looking after the welfare of all parties involved in the process, donors, recipients and offspring.

“Fertility clinics have a responsibility to all these parties and it certainly seems that there exists a seriously flawed system of donor gamete acquisition and quality surveillance in some USA sperm banks.”

http://www.prlog.org/11798274-overseas-sperm-donors-is-this-what-we-want-or-need.html


By admin on February 13, 2012

From a poster in the DSR’s Yahoo Group:

There are frequent comments that ending donor anonymity will automatically
result in a drop in donor numbers.

The HFEA in the UK has updated its figures to include two more years showing that the numbers of UK sperm donors have gone *up* six years in a row since the ending of anonymity, thus reversing a three year decline. The 480 sperm donors in 2010 was the highest figure since they started keeping records, and more than double the figure in 2004 just before anonymity ended. The numbers of egg donors have also gone up four years in a row, and the 1258 egg donors in 2010 was the second highest figure ever.

All new donors registered:

Year Sperm donors Egg donors
1992 375 451
1993 426 528
1994 417 732
1995 414 749
1996 419 806
1997 343 910
1998 256 943
1999 302 1,120
2000 323 1,241
2001 327 1,302
2002 288 1,174
2003 257 1,032
2004 239 1,107
2005 272 1,023
2006 303 803
2007 360 1,024
2008 405 1,167
2009 438 1,202
2010 480 1,258


By admin on February 08, 2012

Contributed by Rich Hatch, first winner of the tv series “Survivor”, former sperm donor and DSR member since 2005.

“Often, people say how lucky I was to have been selected to participate in the original Survivor series. Others claim I was even luckier to have won. But “luck” is an interesting concept. I’m unconvinced it had much to do with my winning, or even with my having been selected!

In support of my doubt, I would be hard-pressed to exaggerate the resistance I encountered when I was contemplating submitting my application. With rare exception, people poo-poo’d the idea. They said I’d be wasting my time. They thought it unlikely that regular-ol’-me would merit a second look. But the rational devil’s advocate in me chimed in immediately with a resounding, “Why not?” Why shouldn’t I be selected? After all, they had to select someone, and I’m a darn interestin’ fella.

Rather than luck, I attribute both my having been selected to participate and my eventual winning of Survivor to living in such a way as to wring from life all of what it has to offer… which brings me to having donated sperm during college and to the Donor Sibling Registry today.

When I first contemplated donating sperm, I took the time to consider the implications of doing so. Without knowing how my life and family might develop over the years, I imagined what it might be like to have biological offspring with whom I may never interact. I thought about the families trying, but unable to conceive on their own. I imagined what it might be like to have biological offspring who may someday seek a relationship with me. After considering all that, I made the decision to become a sperm donor. Fairfax Genetics and IVF Institute (its name then) was the sperm bank in Fairfax, Virginia, where I donated during 1986 and 1987.

My interesting and exciting life unfolded thereafter. I served in the Army and attended the United States Military Academy at West Point. I became a Big Brother and mentored a boy in my hometown. Later, I adopted a seven-year-old boy in state care and served on the Board of Directors of Adoption Rhode Island. I built a successful training and consulting firm. Eventually I went on to win the original Survivor series. Since then, I’ve been facing legal challenges I wouldn’t wish upon anyone… but I still anticipate the truth will eventually prevail, and I will be exonerated!

Over the years, I’d wondered what children may have been born and how their lives might be unfolding. I wrote to the Fairfax Genetics and IVF Institute saying I wanted to release them from their promise to keep my identity private. I also asked them for my donor number in the hopes of someday connecting with any of my offspring or their families who might want to know me. However to my utter dismay and distress, Fairfax Genetics and IVF Institute was adamant they would never release my identity to any offspring or recipients. They also denied me the right to know my own donor number.

I felt awful thinking that my offspring or their family members might be trying to find me. There appeared little, if anything, I could do to make myself accessible to any of them who might be searching. Then, in 2005, I found out about the Donor Sibling Registry. Even though I didn’t have a donor number, I immediately registered and posted. And then I waited.

In 2010, I was in Rhode Island. I received a call from a young guy in New Jersey who’d been searching the Donor Sibling Registry. When he was 12, he’d been told his donor was Swedish and 6’5” tall, but he also, had no donor number to search with. We talked about our possible connection (I’m 6’4” tall, and one of my mom’s parents had Swedish ancestry). We were both excited. He traveled by train to RI where he and I followed the instructions on a DNA test kit then mailed the swabs to the lab . Shortly thereafter, we received the results. Devin is my biological son. He’s 22, and we’re both open to whatever relationship might develop as a result of our being connected biologically.

In 2011, I got another call. My partner Emiliano (more accurately my spouse, since we married in Canada almost nine years ago, although our government refuses to recognize this) called to say we’d been contacted by a girl from Maine named Emily. This time we didn’t need DNA testing to confirm our connection, since Emily’s mom, Lisa had matched her donor’s number with Devin’s new-found donor number. Thanks again, Donor Sibling Registry!

Emi (short for Emiliano) and I spent last Christmas Eve with Emily’s family in Maine. In January 2012, Devin, Emily, and Lisa all traveled to Newport, to meet more of my family including my son, Chris, my mom, Peggy, my sisters, Kristin and Susan, and others. Though I’d been a sperm donor in Virginia, and Emily had been raised in Maine, she’d spent the last four years at Salve Regina University, just a few hundred yards down the street from my home in Newport, RI. How crazy is that?

Our fascinating stories continue to unfold. Emily’s dad passed away when she was 7 years old. Emily is interested in seeing what relationship she and I might build. Each of us have been very respectful of the lives we’ve so far been living, and we’re interested in how things might yet unfold. We learn as we go. The future is open regarding the involvement we may play in each others lives from now on, as we go forward.

I can already “hear” people thinking how lucky I am to have connected with my now-adult children. Just as I feel about most things into which I’ve put significant thought, preparation and action, I’m convinced that the connections I’ve made are less about luck and more about having made thoughtful, intelligent choices. Each decision I took was designed to produce a desired outcome.

If you’re considering joining the Donor Sibling Registry, I highly recommend you do so. Applying patience, respect and open mindedness, the connections you make will enrich your life and the lives of others with whom you may connect. The process may involve some challenges (emotional and otherwise). As someone who has been through the process, I am happy to volunteer assisting other donors, offspring, or family members who think I might help them manage expectations or contribute some insight into the process.

I wish you all, GOOD LUCK!”