By admin on August 02, 2021
 There is overwhelming evidence and therefore good reason to question, doubt, and challenge the way that sperm banks present, promise, and follow through with their "open donor" policies. 
 
The concept of “open” or “open identity” or “identity-release” or “willing-to-be-known” donation is simple:

  • A young man sells his sperm to a sperm bank as an “open” donor: he agrees to have contact with the children he helps to create when they turn 18.
  • Parents wanting a child purchase that man's sperm from the sperm bank. Vials of this anonymous-for-18-years sperm can be more expensive than anonymous-for-ever sperm.
  • A child is conceived, parents are thrilled, the sperm bank makes money, and the donor expects to stay anonymous for 18 years. 
  • The resulting child expects contact with their biological parent when they turn 18 (if desired).
 
Many thousands of donor-conceived people (DCP) have grown up thinking that they’ll get to know their biological father when they’re 18. But, for many years we’ve been hearing from families who purchased anonymous-for-18 years sperm, only to find out later on that this is not the case.  
While there have been many happy connections made between adult DCP and their biological fathers via the sperm banks, all too often sperm banks:

  • Don’t respond to calls or requests from DCP or never follow-up;
  • Claim that donors can’t be found (sometimes this is just not the truth);
  • Claim that the donor has refused contact (sometimes this is just not the truth);
  • Claim that a donor is anonymous-forever, even though the donor signed up to be an open donor or had no choice and has since made it clear to the sperm bank that he is open to contact.
  • Refuse to give donors their own donor number.

From A Fairfax Parent:
We recently identified our donor via DNA testing and a geneticist. I sent him a message yesterday and he said he had called the bank (Fairfax), and asked to change his status to known, and they would not do it. He said at the time of donation (20 yrs ago) they did not give him the option to be known but he told them he was ok with contact. My point is, they DENIED him and the families this option.  He said he anxiously awaited the day he would be found. It angers me that the bank took it upon themselves to deny his request.

From Two Fairfax Cryobank Donors:
I, too, donated more than 20 yrs ago at Fairfax. I’ve tried all methods of which I could think to get Fairfax to open my record to anyone seeking it. They denied me every time, and have continued to deny me. They wouldn’t even tell me my own donor number. Fortunately, one biological son found me on the DSR.
--
Fairfax listed me as anonymous even though I had signed several documents that allowed for my information to be given out.

From a Fairfax Parent:
I have the same situation - a donor who was a yes and then turned into a no. I was told that a donor has the right to change their mind about being contacted and that this is what happened in our situation.
 
From a California Cryobank Donor's Wife:
The only time we have ever heard from the Cryobank was in 2010 (he donated 2003-2005) to inform him that he would be "retired" because a child was born with a medical issue.  At that time, they informed him that he would be receiving surveys, etc. to update his contact and medical information, which he never received.  They have never reached out for updated contact information.  He has reached out twice and been told he would receive surveys via email, which he has not.  Is this typical?
My husband matched with a family via DNA and the mother told us that CCB told her that her donor "did not want communication”. We were upset to hear the mother was told we did not want contact and that we had agreed to be contacted by the donor-conceived children.
 
From Three New England Cryogenic (NECC) Parents:
I chose a “yes” donor/donor release option, have paperwork saying the info will be released to my daughter once she’s of age, yet the owner of the bank is not honoring the agreement, and wouldn’t even return a phone call for months, then after one okay/civil conversation, in which she agreed to call me back with no information...completely disappeared and never called back.
--
 
We have been trying to work with NECC to contact our identity release donor for months now and are not having any luck hearing back from them as to the status of our request except that they have the paperwork needed to move forward. Phone calls and emails are not returned.
--
I am going through this with NECC now! It is dragging out to months and I can’t get any info from them as to what is taking so long. They acted like this was the first request for donor contact they had gotten.....
The sperm banks are too often failing to provide DCP with what both the donor and the parents agreed to, and what they, therefore, expected at age 18.
 
The interpretation of an open donor is left to each different facility, or to the whim of young men, many who donate while in college and who are never properly educated or counseled about the numbers or the needs of the children they helped to create, the reasons that their biological children might desire contact, or about the likelihood that they won’t be able to stay anonymous for 18 years.

  • We know of donors who tried to change from anonymous to open, but couldn’t. 
  • We know about donors who were sold as open but don’t respond to contact requests. 
  • We also know about open donors who refuse contact. Donors with 50, 100, or 200+ offspring can feel completely overwhelmed and not have the family support, emotional bandwidth, or capability to connect with that many kids, as many of them were promised and expected no more than 10 or 20. Additionally, many sperm donors feel embarrassed or ashamed about their history of sperm donation and therefore feel very strongly about keeping it a secret.
  • We have thousands of donors on the Donor Sibling Registry who either chose anonymity or who weren't given a choice. We’ve found that when donors are properly educated about the needs and desires of DCP and given the opportunity to connect, many are then very open to establishing relationships with their biological children who are both over and under the age of 18.

From a California Cryobank DCP:
...the donor refuses to meet, talk or provide any photos, even though he was a "yes" donor. 
Since the beginnings of donor conception, policies have been set to include the rights of the facilities to sell the gametes, the rights of parents to buy those gametes to build their family, and the rights of donors to sell their gametes and to remain anonymous.  But this isn't an equitable situation as the rights of the donor-conceived people have not been considered when setting policy. We believe they should not only have a seat at the policy table but should also be listened to first and foremost.
  
Every single vial of sperm sold in the US and Denmark is sold as anonymous, be it for 18 years or forever.  Because the large US and Danish sperm banks ship to more than 50-60 countries, local laws (eg., in the UK, Canada, and Australia) regarding anonymity or limits on offspring are meaningless.
 
The reproductive medicine industry needs to acknowledge that maintaining donor anonymity for 18 years is not possible, and hasn't been since 2005.  If a person is thinking about selling their gametes and wishes to remain anonymous for 18 years or longer, they just shouldn’t donate.
 
Since 2000, the Donor Sibling Registry has been facilitating mutual consent contact between many thousands of donor-conceived people and their half-siblings and/or their biological parents. For many medical and psycho-social reasons, contact long before the age of 18 can be both crucial and beneficial for all stakeholders: the parents, the donors, the donor’s family, and most importantly, for the DCP.
 
So why continue to try and force families and donors to wait 18 years, or even refuse to connect donors with DCP after they’re 18? 
 
It’s a financial thing:
  1. Keeping and updating records costs money. Sperm banks do not have accurate records on how many children are born for any one donor.
  2. Maintaining promises of updating and sharing medical information is costly and might result in lawsuits. 
  3. Keeping promises of limits on numbers of offspring would be costly as selling less vials of a single donor would also affect their net profit.
 
Mandating 18 years of anonymity serves the best interests of the sperm banks and fertility clinics. They've too often tried to scare parents and donors into believing that this mandate is in their best interests by telling them nonsense about custody battles  (there have been none that include a sperm bank or egg clinic donor), non-existent donor legal rights and responsibilities, and non-existent anonymity "laws" and FDA “anonymity mandates”
 
The sperm banks don't want the donors to know that they have 50, 100, or even more than 200 kids when they were promised no more than 10, 20, or 25 kids or families. DCP in these large groups who desire contact with their biological father may never get it, just because a sperm bank was careless and there is now an unmanageable number of offspring from a single donor.
 
84% of 164 surveyed sperm donors were never contacted by the sperm bank for a medical update (most sperm banks promise families yearly updates) while 23% indicated that they or a family member did have a medical issue that would be important to share. Not updating or sharing medical information decreases the sperm bank’s liability as medical issues can be ignored instead of shared.  ⁠But, without medical updates, and if a donor-conceived person doesn't know all of their half-siblings or their unknown biological parent, they could be missing out on sharing information about a physiological or psychological genetic issue that would warrant proper screenings, monitoring, or preventative medicine.
 
From A California Cryobank Donor:
For anybody that was looking for health updates or genealogy information for their children, I apologize for not posting to the registry sooner. I naively assumed that CCB would have requested updates or actually informed me of any offspring that tried to reach me after turning 18. My experience with CCB is very similar to what is reported on your website. I remember being explicit that I wanted to be available if any offspring wanted to contact me. Yet they had me listed as anonymous. And I also remember them assuring me that only 5-10 families would be sold to.

From Three Fairfax Parents:
My son has 220 known 1/2 siblings...our donor donated for at least 6-7 years!! The sperm banks make their own guidelines....and self police. It is not a regulated industry!
***
 
We purchased from Fairfax in 2008 and they told us that there had been “2 live births” from the donor. Turns out Fairfax was aware of over 50 known at that time!! Fairfax lies!! But, it is our “normal” and a battle our kids may choose to fight when they become adults.
***
 
Fairfax lies a lot. They told me 10 families. My kids have almost 200 half siblings.
 
From a Xytex Parent:
I used Xytex and my daughter has 100+ siblings which is a disgrace. I'm planning to write (another) complaint letter to the Fertility Society of Australia with details about the sperm banks that Australian clinics are using, and how they can justify using these banks when scenarios like this are happening and staff are admitting there are actually no limits.
 
From a Fairfax Parent:
I have recently found out that the sperm bank I used may have misrepresented themselves to me, and told me the donor agreed to be identified . They are now telling me (8 yrs later) that the donor is a NO donor not an identity release donor. Has anyone ever run into this before?? Any ideas on how to handle this??
 
From a Donor:
As a donor I updated my medical records between donations. They did not pass those updates on to previous donations NOR donations that came after those updates. I only know that because a family that came after that insisted on contact. She showed me all of the info she had gotten on me. Those updates were not included. Any of the updates I have done since have not been passed on to her either.
 
From a California Cryobank Parent:
I will almost guarantee you that CCB never attempted to contact your donor. We've had several kids attempt contact through them and our donor reports that he never received any correspondence from them. And his contact info is all up to date.

From A California Cryobank Donor:
As an ID Release Donor my adult offspring should be able to contact California Cryobank, say “Hey, # XYZW was my donor. Please give me his contact information.” Every time I have moved or changed phone numbers or email addresses I have dutifully updated California Cryobank. So I asked one of my 20 year old kids (who I met through the DSR 7 years ago) to test the sperm bank. He called them, and was transferred to voicemail. I figured nobody would call him back, but lo and behold they did call him today. They asked him a bunch of questions to prove his and his mother’s identity, then told him I was an anonymous donor (Lie) and they didn’t have my contact information (Lie) but they would try to get in touch with me.

From Several California Cryobank Parents:
.. if the sperm bank [CCB]  can't find the donor 3 years down the road when my sons were speech delayed or 6 years down the road when my son had cancer, why do they claim they can find him after 18 years??
-
--
My CCB donor was also a yes (open) donor and now is a no donor. I am happy to say that we have four beautiful matches on the DSR. 2 girls and 2 boys. I don't know what the future has in store for us but I am happy to have the siblings we have now. 
---

I had something like that happen to my donor. Also, at CCB. It occurred after he was asked to reactivate for a couple. He obliged but then he changed to no. Ironically, that's when I discovered this registry and recently discovered that there are 3 half siblings. I've made limited contact with one parent of a sibling at Christmas time.
--

I have the same issue with CCB. When we were first looking at donors, we decided that we would like to use someone who was, at least, open to the idea of possibly being identified when my son turns 18. All of the information that I originally downloaded/printed said the donor was willing to be id'd when the children are 18...NOW, when I look at the information - even though the donor is retired - it shows him as a NO!
--
From A California Cryobank Donor:
I was a donor at California Cryobank who was open to contact and still every time a biological child of mine has reached out they have put up roadblocks.


From a California Cryobank DCP:
My moms used CCB as well and the narrative they/we were given was also that I could reach out when I was 18. Well I did when I was about 21/22 and played phone tag with some sort of client relations person who never ended up getting back to me. ...didn't need her to anyway, because we found my donor through Ancestry DNA..


 
 
From Two Parents (different donors) who used Pacific Reproductive Services (PRS):
My son is 19 and last year contacted PRS to begin the process of contacting his “willing to be known” donor. PRS told my son his donor was anonymous and he couldn’t contact him. I had all my paperwork that clearly stated otherwise. Upon further investigation, PRS told us the donor had changed his status from “willing to be known” to “anonymous” one month after I conceived.
--
Through your website, we have made contact with many families who used our donor. Our daughter will be 18 next year and was looking forward to getting more information about the donor at that time. We understand from one of the other families that the donor wishes to change his status to anonymous and has refused contact. We were also told that the sperm bank’s attorneys are preparing a letter to send to us. Needless to say, we’re terribly disappointed and haven’t figured out how to break it to our child.

A PRS Parent received this explanation from PRS:
About “Willing to be Known” Donors: Most of our donors are willing to be known to the children conceived as a result of artificial insemination with their donated semen when the child has reached the legal age of consent (18 years old in the state of California). The child must contact PRS to initiate the disclosure of the donor’s identity. PRS will attempt to arrange a meeting between the donor and the child. If PRS is unable to arrange such a meeting, the donor’s identifying information will be released to the child to enable the child to pursue this process on his/her own. The child will sign a contract specifically requesting that s/he respect the donor’s privacy in pursuing a meeting (i.e., not discussing the purpose of the meeting with anyone except the donor himself). Once a meeting has occurred, the donor’s obligation has been fulfilled. Pacific Reproductive Services cannot guarantee that the meeting between the donor and the child will occur. PRS must rely solely upon the donor’s representation and signed contract that he is willing to be known.

From a PRS DCP:
I am joining to search for any siblings I have. My clinic, PRS, has been extremely unhelpful in my efforts to make contact with my donor, and have even sent hateful words to me via email when I have requested help. I'm hoping this can be a different experience.

From a PRS Parent:
All us moms were given different numbers. They shipped his sperm to other places which he wasn’t aware of either.

From a California Cryobank Donor:
I am a donor who, through the DSR, started meeting my bio offspring (23 of them so far) when they were as young as 3 years old and, in every case, it has been a mutually rewarding and wonderful experience for all involved.

From a European Sperm Bank (Seattle Sperm Bank) Parent:
My kids were found by my donor’s family [via DNA] and they are messaging my kids to connect.  I am trying to get a hold of the donor to make him aware of the situation and ask his permission.   [Update]: I actually found our donor (amazing guy), he is fine with us, but I think if he understood there was 75-100, he’d flip out. We were also told 25 families was the limit.... but now they are saying 25 in the US. They said he was also sent to Canada and Australia. They said that was it, but we know of families all over Europe. 

From the Director of European Sperm Bank (Seattle Sperm Bank):
After presenting research at the ESHRE meeting in Vienna in 2019, Seattle Sperm Bank director Greg poked his head into a conversation I was having in front of his booth to add, “The FDA mandates anonymity!” No, they do not. The FDA only mandates testing donors for communicable diseases and a small handful of other diseases.  As a result, some sperm banks test some donors for diseases like Thalassemia and Tay Sachs. No one mandates anonymity except the sperm banks and egg clinics. This sperm bank director’s misinformation about the FDA’s rules might be the reason for such a low sperm donor presence on the DSR’s Seattle Sperm Bank list.

From the VP of Communications California Cryobank (CCB):
NBC News, 2019: Scott Brown said, “Family is what we are in the business of, not genetic connection.”
 
Several years ago I asked California Cryobank about their open donor policy, and was told that when a child of 18 requested contact, the donors were sent a letter only asking them to “update” their information, not mentioning anything about a child desiring contact. So, if a donor read the letter and thought “I have nothing to update” he’d likely just toss the letter. He would never know a child desired to meet him, and the child would think that the donor refused contact. So I asked CCB: “Your rep said that when there is a request, donors are sent a letter to ‘update’ their file. They are not actually notified that a child actually wants to meet them. Is this true? This could explain the low response rate, as the donors are not made aware that a child is actually wanting to meet them.”
The reply I received back from CCB:
Our system is set up to protect the interests of all parties. We contact the donors via mail and/or email. If he chooses to respond, we explain the situation and ask if he is interested in moving forward with the contact. To send a letter with information about an offspring out of the blue could be very jarring, irresponsible, and could ultimately illicit an even lower response rate from the donors who do not understand the specifics of the interaction. We don’t phone them until they give us the ok, because if they have a wife or children who could answer the phone, it could put them in an awkward position.

From a Parent:
I have friends in Australia who followed all the rules and picked an identity release donor with less than 5 families in Australia. It was only after they conceived that they discovered he has donated all over the place and is hitting 1000 with nothing to stop him from continuing to sell his sperm.

From Two California Cryobank Parents:
I did look at the CCB website last night [2019] to check. They still sell Anonymous, Open and ID Release. Having paid premium pricing for Open (willing to be known) I looked at their new conditions with the third category. I was horrified to discover that the first statement on Open Donors is that it specifically excludes learning the identity of the donor. Not what I had in mind at all. ID Release gives the donor’s identifying details to the 18+ on request. However, amongst other conditions, they now require the DC person to sign a non-disclosure agreement specifically forbidding them to tell their siblings. Otherwise they will refuse to deliver the ID the parents paid for. These conditions and unilateral changes probably would not stand up to challenge under contract law but have not been tested yet.
---

My oldest daughter reached out to CCB last spring when she turned 18, requesting contact with the donor. After a few days, Latrice Allen emailed my daughter and told her that they "know his whereabouts" and will reach out to him, but not to expect contact because he has the right to say No. She said they would attempt to contact him 3 times. My daughter never heard back.
 
From a DCP:
I don't think donor anonymity is an issue that is front of mind for the general public. It's individual fertility specialists and clinics seeking to retain control and living out their antediluvian paternalistic attitudes in practice that are the reasons behind the persistence of donor anonymity. They don't trust the lived experience of donors, donor-conceived people, or the parents of donor-conceived people and believe that in call cases "doctor knows best". When you have a combination of capitalism and patriarchy you're going to have problems with getting progressive values into place.
 
 

From a Donor:  
My DC offspring may wait until they are 18 to contact me. In that time, they have lost out on meeting their biological great grandparents and may miss out on their biological grandparents too. What if I wasn't still alive when they hit 18, and they could have known some family, but that time was lost too.  These children have every right to track down and have the chance to know family before family may be gone. You can not undo time because you waited too late. Time is precious.
 
From a Parent:
By the time we found my son’s donor we learned he died suddenly 2 years prior. We did find his sister though, and she is a loving aunt figure to the 26 siblings.
 
 


By admin on July 05, 2021


When the Donor Sibling Registry was first established in 2000, most of our members thought that each donor might have a handful of offspring, as many of us were told by the sperm banks that each donor would have no more than ten kids. As time went on, some of us who had children later in the 1990s and into the 2000s were told no more than twenty. Over the years, as our members started matching with each other, the small half-sibling groups turned into 50 and then 100 and now more than 200. It's abundantly clear that the limits and numbers we were all given by the sperm banks were and still are false. 

Some report that every time they call the sperm bank to inquire about the number of offspring for our donor, they get a wildly different number, depending on who answers the phone that day. I was once told "three", then shortly after that, "nine".  A few years ago, on an invited visit to California Cryobank's office, my son Ryan was told that they had a record of one half-sibling. He currently has twenty-one donor siblings and many of our donor 1058 families were promised no more than ten by California Cryobank. 

A sperm bank can not know how many children are born from any one donor, as reporting births is voluntary. Our research has shown that 45% of our surveyed 1700 sperm donor recipients had no request by the sperm bank or clinic to report the birth of their child(ren), and 31% of those say that the sperm bank is unaware of the birth of their child. (42% of our surveyed 108 egg donor parents were also never asked to report their births). Sperm banks must stop misleading sperm donors and parents about their ability or concern in regards to limiting the number of children born to any single donor. Additionally, our research showed that between 22%-28% of donors donate to more than one facility, a statistic that further complicates keeping track.
 
This mom's phone call with California Cryobank had many Donor Sibling Registry members on our Facebook group discussing the numbers of their half-sibling groups, some over 100 and even over 200.

I just had an employee from CCB chuckle when I asked about limits. He then admitted they do not in any way limit how many people they sell vials.

I had been told donor was limited to 10 families before my first purchase. Then was told limited to 25 families after reporting my son's birth. Explained I was nervous seeing that we were at 11 families knowing that not all people report. He actually laughed. I mean it was a chuckle, but still, laughed at the idea of limits. Told me that to be put on sibling restriction you had to have anywhere from 15-20 families report and so we were "at least" at that point since he was restricted. I was too annoyed to ask why it would vary between 15 to 20. But, he goes further and said there is actually NO LIMIT to how many people they will sell to before they hear back about pregnancies/live births.

He then went further and tried to get me to understand they were a business selling internationally. When I reminded him they were a business engaged in helping to create life, it barely registered. When I said they should require reporting and tracking, he told me it would be impossible and the company would never do that. When I said it could be made part of the contract that you had to report, he told me people from the company would not follow up with us as it was too sensitive a topic. They wouldn't want to cause further harm if they followed up only to find out we had losses.

I swear these people are unbelievable. I realize I am preaching to the choir here, but I just had to share my frustration with someone. I love my son and would not want to change having him. But, I so wish I had been more educated about the lack of regulation ahead of time. This industry needs regulation.

A prospective parent was genuinely curious as to why these large half-sibling groups were even a problem. 
So I have to ask. Why does it matter? Like why do you care how many families benefit from one donor? Not being rude. Just generally curious. I have never even heard of this issue.

I explained, that there are many medical and psycho-social reasons why 50, 100, or more than 200 kids from one donor is problematic:
  • If a donor has a heritable genetic medical issue, it could be passed along to dozens of kids. ⁠If a donor-conceived person doesn't know all of their half-siblings, they could be missing out on sharing and updating important medical information. There could be a genetic issue that would warrant proper screenings, monitoring, or preventative medicine.
  • A donor with 50, 100, or 200+ kids is less likely to connect with those kids later on, just because of the sheer number. So kids in these large groups who desire contact with their biological father may never get it, just because the sperm bank was careless. 
  • While sperm banks try and minimize the possibility of random meetings, this is an all-to-common experience. With that many offspring, meetings are much more likely.

Nordic Cryobank/California Cryobank donor 7042 "Ralph", who has the genetic disease NF1 (neurofibromatosis) and whose currently known offspring (at the time) number "a staggering 99 children worldwide, of which 34 [were] conceived in [the U.S.]. When the first child was diagnosed and reported to the Cryo Bank in June 2009, the sperm bank waited 6 months to alert all the clinics where the sperm was delivered. There are also reasons to believe that the sperm donor wasn’t properly screened. We know for a fact that 19 children inherited the disorder but not all children were tested on the disease.

From a Parent:
Feeling like a clone; feeling completely overwhelmed by the enormity of the situation; the inability to have meaningful relationships with that many siblings; bearing the burden of siblings' grief/shock when they discover they are DC and make contact; being rejected by siblings; being unsure whether to reach out and connect because you don't know whether the sibling even knows they're DC; walking down the street and wondering if someone who looks similar is a sibling, etc. My 10 yo has told me she'll look for all of her siblings (100+) until she dies. This is a terrible burden for her to carry.

The banks need to take accountability for that aspect. At the moment they leave 100% onus on recipients to report a birth, which many many people don't do. For the banks, this policy is super convenient. I.e. they can keep on selling gametes and maximising the income they receive from each donor, while taking no responsibility for the harm they're causing to the DC people being born.

From a Donor-Conceived Person:
Plus, feeling like a commodity, having a biological father who views you as another success story and a reflection of his fertility rather than seeing each of you as individuals and being prepared to get to know you and like you for who you are. Being able to reach out to your paternal family and receive a warm welcome rather than a cease and desist letter because your older sisters are horrified and quite unable to cope with the idea of hundreds of siblings coming out of the woodwork. All of this has been my experience of being part of a large sib group.

From a California Cryobank DCP:
...the donor refuses to meet, talk or provide any photos, even though he was a "yes" donor.

From a Donor with 36 Donor children:

"I took a while to respond because “I didn’t know what to do. I was overwhelmed.”

From a European Sperm Bank/Seattle Sperm Bank Parent:

My kids were found by my donor’s family [via DNA] and they are messaging my kids to connect.  I am trying to get a hold of the donor to make him aware of the situation and ask his permission.   [Update]: I actually found our donor (amazing guy), he is fine with us, but I think if he understood there was 75-100, he’d flip out. We were also told 25 families was the limit.... but now they are saying 25 in the US. They said he was also sent to Canada and Australia, but we know of families all over Europe.

From a Cryos mom:
I have friends in Australia who followed all the rules and picked an identity release donor with less than 5 families in Australia. It was only after they conceived that they discovered he has donated all over the place and is hitting 1000 with nothing to stop him from continuing to sell his sperm.

From another mom in Australia who used a US Donor:
I used an overseas donor, and travelled to another state for treatment. While looking for half siblings I found some in 4 different countries and also a donor-conceived girl who lived 200 metres from my mums house. She’s around 1 year younger than my son.
 
From a DCP:
 I work about 75 steps from my recently found 1/2 sister’s apartment which is on the same block. I walk past her door every day. If one of us was a guy it could have been us. 

From a Parent:
2 half siblings not only lived in the same city in Canada ,went to the same college, had the same major (one year apart) but had mutual friends and were at the same parties having NO idea they were half siblings! The year after they found out they were in the same class and sat next to each other. Oh the stories I could tell about all of this is insane! 

From a DCP:
My full sister and one of our half brothers were in the same major, in the same graduating class, at the same university, and didn't know they were related until their senior year. 

This Fairfax group of 150 half-siblings that was featured in the NY Times in 2011 is now reporting in that the group is around 220 and one DSR mom reported to me privately that her child had more than 300 half-siblings from Midwest Cryobank.

From a Parent (yes, this one does take the cake):
My kids' half-sibling group is close to 100, and we've already had a few kids cross paths randomly -- but this one takes the cake! My (gay) daughter recently matched with a half-sister on Tinder! Luckily the other girl had recently learned she was donor-conceived and had connected with our group. The two girls had a bit of a laugh about it in their Tinder text exchange, but this situation illustrates the importance of TELLING your kids about their donor conception and TALKING about the possibility of encountering half-sibs out in the world.

From a Parent:
The donor lives in the same area he did while donating as do many of the 1/2 siblings.  Through this process, we have found that:
  • Two siblings worked out together in college daily and were good friends.  
  • Four siblings (so far) went to the same college with a similar major. 
  • One sibling grew up and their family still lives just blocks away from us.
  • Some siblings attended the same elementary school and high school (though at different times).
  • The donor's "home" children were teachers to my children for 3 years.
  • One of the donor's children teaches at the school that my child attends (but doesn't know about us).
  • One sibling, a police officer, just found that the strange man, he watches, handing out literature at store fronts, was his donor.

From a DCP:
I am a sperm donor baby from Texas. I have a twin sister. I recently did an Ancestry DNA test and found out that my half-sister is one of my best friends from high school.

From a Parent:
I just had a very crazy experience. My daughter was invited to a birthday party of her classmates. When I saw the invitation, I immediately thought that they looked like my daughter. Long story short my daughter is in the same preschool class as her half brother and sister. They are only 6 days apart in age. What are the chances!!!

From a Donor-Conceived Person:
The vast majority of DCP are totally unaware of their status. In my sib group (hundreds) not one of us was told. Genetic sexual attraction is definitely a very real thing. Even if you know before you meet a sib you can get really confused when you fall in love - the rush of feelings and wanted to be with this person you connect so well with is totally confusing (and we are all mature, well educated etc).

A Mom in Canada Asked:
Do you think if we were able to get the human assisted reproduction act reopened in Canada such that it would allow sperm banks in Canada to pay donors and if the Canadian government were to regulate the industry so as to limit the number of children do you think that could work or would the American associations overpower the system here too? I may have found a way to get the act revisited here but there’s no point if we end up with the same problem. I know you don’t have a crystal ball. Just curious about your opinion.
 
My reply:

At one point I spoke with Health Canada, and they didn't seem too interested to hear about the issues with US sperm banks. I know there was a group in Canada working to get things changed, but I don't think they were too successful either as most Canadians using sperm now import it from the US sperm banks. So, I just don't know. Canada would have to pay donors, track and limit births (mandatory reporting), and then allow donors and parents to connect from pregnancy/birth, as there are no good ⁠reasons​ to work so hard to keep donors and families from each other for 18 years. And, it's just not possible.

And finally, from a Mom who used Pacific Reproductive Services: 
How can you even know?  All us moms were given different numbers. They shipped his sperm to other places which he wasn’t aware of either.




By admin on February 13, 2021

California Cryobank On How Many Children They've Helped to Create:


Just in case you were tempted to believe California Cryobank when they tell you that they have accurate records on the number of kids they've helped to create, it sure looks like they've always been pulling numbers out of their....er....thin air.

CCB claims anywhere between 65k-750k estimated/registered births/families on their website, in press releases, and in media interviews between 2005-2020:

11/05: CNN:  Dr. Cappy Rothman is a pioneer in the field of donor sperm.(on camera): He founded California Cryobank in the mid-1970s, and estimated as many as three-quarters of a million babies have been born from his sperm bank alone, a daunting number considering there are now 150 sperm banks across the country.
3/06: 60 Minutes: The California Cryobank is one of the largest in the country, and has supplied the sperm to create as many as 200,000 babies.
7/06: According to Dr. Cappy Rothman, director of California Cryobank, one of the world’s largest sperm banks, single women and lesbian couples now make up half of his bank’s clientele, which ships about 2,500 vials of sperm each month. He estimates that his bank alone has been responsible for 75,000 children over the years.
12/07 The Atlantic: which helps about 10,000 women each year to conceive,.. [DSR Note: using this math, that would be up to ~300k already created, and their 2020 numbers would include ~130k additional kids]
1/20  This organization has collectively helped create nearly 100,000 families
1/20: AP: World's largest sperm bank 75,000 children born and Largest frozen donor egg bank in the US 5,000 children born
4/20: The Harvard Crimson “courtesy of California Cryobank” “California Cryobank, a sperm bank founded in 1977, has registered 75,000 births since its inception, making it one of the world’s largest reproduction agencies.” 

And now for something completely different. From Fairfax Cryobank:


11/15 and 10/18  Sperm banking fundamentals – Birth Statistics

The following background information on sperm banking was prepared by and agreed upon by the leading companies in the industry. Its purpose is to provide basic information about some of the key elements of a sperm bank’s operations and influence, and to further understanding by providing accurate and consistent information.

Birth Statistics: The popular press often cites the number of anonymous donor inseminated births per year at 30,000.

Although no industry-wide statistics are maintained, an unpublished survey conducted by the AATB suggests that a more accurate figure would be 4,000 to 5,000 donor inseminated births per year. This is calculated based on 1.5 vials per insemination, a 10% pregnancy rate per cycle, and a 20% spontaneous miscarriage rate.

By extrapolating this annual figure, the total number of anonymous donor inseminated births is estimated to be less than 130,000 over the last 30 years.

[DSR notes: Fairfax uses data from an AATB "unpublished survey" to extrapolate estimated numbers of donor offspring?  Which sperm banks contributed their grossly incomplete records to that survey?  The AATB, nor any agency requires or collects live birth data on sperm donor babies. [We noted the falsity of "30,000-60,000 donor children born each year" in 2015 and continue to contact major newspapers who still falsely use this number as fact.]