There Are Many Ways to Have Children Including Adoption and Fertility Treatments

The whole world has changed in the last fifty years or less.  At one time, people just got married and had a family and that was all there was to it.  Families came in all sizes, and since contraception was in its infancy, as we knew it of course, most used a bit of the rhythm method to either have babies or to not have babies along with rubbers.  All of that was hit or miss at best, but once a child was born into a family it was loved and taken care of.  If a woman had a baby out of wedlock, it was a shame on her whole family, and many just went away to an aunt or another relative and had the baby and gave it up for adoption.  Sometimes there was someone in the family who could not conceive, and the baby was adopted within the family.  And if you could not conceive within a marriage, adoption was your only recourse, and at best it was hard to do with social workers examining every aspect of your life.  Many older children were simply put into orphanages  if their parents divorced or one died and the family could not take care of them.  It was a much simpler time even if it could be harsh and unforgiving.  Many infertile couples simply longed for children they could never have.

Then oral contraception for women was finally a reality.  It was only given by doctors to married women with a husbands consent at first.  The first pills were very strong and would never be used now and had some side effects, but it did free couples that wanted to plan and space their families or have no more children at all.  The pills did not work for all women and some could not take them because of side effects, but it was the first step in controlling pregnancy.  The pills, however, did nothing to help a couple who wanted to have a family.  Those couples still only had adoption as an option and in some parts of the country, babies were even sold to the highest bidder by unscrupulous doctors wanting the line their pockets with cash.  In many cases, unwed mothers were kept from seeing even family members and never even told the sex of the child they had delivered.  Sometimes even their signatures were forged on papers by the very same doctors who were selling the babies.  In these cases, the adoptive parents had no social workers to interview them and decide on their abilities to parent.  The babies had birth certificates made in the adoptive parents names without what should have been the original birth certificate even being registered with the county where the child had been born.  Those children, when they were grown, had no way to find out any information on their birth parents at all, not even health questions.  Many were never told they were adopted, or, in some cases, only knew from hearing a discussion among family members.  Sometimes not even the parents knew anything about the birth mother.

A married couple sometimes did not know which one of them was responsible for not being able to conceive.  As time went on, there were tests that could be done, mostly on the woman.  It was mainly male doctors who did these tests and it could have been that they did not want a man to feel less of a man by being told he was infertile.  When the male tests were used, and the man found out he was infertile, the couple did no more about having children.  Next came sperm donations.  Some couples used this method, and in many cases, it was just intelligent young men in college who donated sperm.  The techniques were in their infancy and the sperm was just placed in a woman’s vagina when a doctor found her to be in her most fertile time.  More often than not, no pregnancy resulted.  They would try month after month until the woman got pregnant or the couple just got tired of trying.  There was very little information given about the sperm donor, but sometimes, if a couple had enough money, certain specific traits in the donor were guaranteed so that the baby would look more like its parents.

Now the whole area of medicine is specialized.  If a couple is having problems getting pregnant, the man is usually the first one tested because the test is so easy.  If he is fertile, then further testing is done on the wife.  Even if he is infertile or has lazy sperm or a low sperm count, a husbands own sperm can now be used after his wife has undergone several months of medication for her to ripen as many eggs as is possible.  The lab then picks out the best sperm and injects it into an egg.  No longer is just a petri dish used for fertilization.  If enough eggs become fertilized, several are put into the wife’s uterus at the same time, as some may not attach in the right way and be lost.  This whole procedure has made many families happy.  Now there are even ways for young women, many who need money for college, to donate eggs through egg donor agencies.  Usually in this case, a couple will use the father’s sperm and employ a surrogate to carry the child to term.  There are more serious legal ramifications of this process, but in many cases it works to everyone’s satisfaction.  There is a health history taken and given to the parents for the child to have, or barring that, the information is available if needed for the future.  In some cases, children born with the same sperm donor have found each other on line and have met.  And some of the fathers have met their offspring also.  But if they have requested that their names never be known, their privacy is closely guarded and the children are only given a number assigned by the sperm donor bank.  It really is a brave new world.

Update on my favorite celeb couple!

As many of you know I cannot get enough of Bill and Guiliana Rancic. They have been so brave and have been so open and honest in the media about thier struggles to get pregnant. They are featured on the celebrity baby blog discussing their next steps to building a family.

http://celebritybabies.people.com/2011/02/09/bill-and-giuliana-rancic-taking-a-break-from-babies/#comment-387752

Connecticut: Landmark ruling enhances parental surrogacy rights

When Anthony and Shawn Raftopol, a gay married couple from Massachusetts, hired a Connecticut surrogate to give birth to their child, they didn’t expect to figure in a landmark ruling by the Connecticut Supreme Court.

But that’s what happened after the surrogate gave birth to twins, and the state Department of Health refused to issue a birth certificate bearing both men’s names as the legal parents. Instead Shawn, who had no biological connection to the twin boys, was told by the agency that he would have to go through a second parent adoption to be listed on the birth certificate.

Read more: http://www.ctpost.com/default/article/Landmark-ruling-enhances-parental-surrogacy-rights-1021270.php#ixzz1EXcnrkxt

Myth: There are few, if any, guidelines to becoming a surrogate

What kind of guidelines are out there for gestational surrogates and intended parents? Does it vary state by state? These questions and more are answered by Mary Ellen McLaughlin, partner and surrogacy expert at ARR. Watch her explain surrogacy guidelines in the video blog below:

New Expert V-cast: Surrogacy Myths

Have questions about surrogacy? Mary Ellen McLaughlin, ARR partner and resident surrogate expert, has the answers. McLaughlin busts the many myths surrounding the gestational surrogacy process through her new series of online v-casts. Check out the first one here:

January And February Newsletter For Donor Network Alliance

Thank you for your interest in the Donor Network Alliance (“DNA”). We wanted to provide you with an update of some of the exciting things that are now happening with DNA and how the site is evolving.

DNA has expanded its services and now has a database for gestational surrogate profiles. Our Member Agencies are in the process of uploading their surrogate profiles and we expect to have between 50-100 surrogates in the first month with this number growing significantly over time. The DNA website also has a brand new look, check it out at www.donornetworkalliance.com!

DNA has changed its usage terms to benefit Intended Parents. DNA has expanded the 48 hour free trial period to 7 days to give Intended Parents more time to review the databases to determine if there are egg donor and/or surrogate profiles that are of interest to them. DNA has also expanded the paid membership term for the egg donor database from 14 days to 30 days so that Intended Parents will have plenty of time to request profiles from DNA Member Agencies to make sure they make the perfect match.

DNA in the last few months has added 5 new agencies. Currently DNA has 27 leading member agencies from throughout the United States that have uploaded over 5500 egg donor profiles which are compiled into one, easy-to-search platform. DNA has a vast array of donors to choose from including: 100 Jewish donors, 18 East Indian donors, 511 Hispanic donors, 333 Asian donors, and 281 African American donors. DNA is recognized as a go to resource for Intended Parents looking to find an egg donor.

The DNA blog now has 89 posts. The blog is very informative and is a great resource for intended parents. You can check out the blog now by going to www.donornetworkalliance.com/blog . DNA is committed to customer service and is available to assist intended patents with any questions or concerns. You can always contact us by phone at 847-480-0888 or by e-mail at

donornetworkkalliance@gmail.com.

Please follow DNA on Twitter and Facebook. We thank you for your continued support.

Poland: Priests to be schooled in IVF

As of February, priests in Krakow, from the John Paul II Centre and the esteemed Papal University, are to be schooled in the ethics and theology surrounding IVF treatment, a highly contentious issue in Poland. “We want to tutor priests in debates that are relevant to the contemporary man,” said Father Zygmunt Kosowski, director of the John Paul II Centre.

Read the article: http://www.thenews.pl/national/artykul147974_priests-to-be-schooled-in-ivf.html

Israel: More single women can now freeze ova

From now on, women aged 30 to 41 who lack partners are able to have up to 20 of their healthy eggs frozen and stored at their own expense in hospital fertility unit ova banks for later use.

The Health Ministry issued for publication on Tuesday the rules and regulations it set down to allow this procedure.

Read the article: http://www.jpost.com/Health/Article.aspx?id=204084

Surrogacy Law: Conn. Gives Non-Genetic Parents Legal Rights

During a two-year legal battle, Anthony and Shawn Raftopol, Americans who live in Holland, worried that only one of the men was the legal parent of their young twin boys. The gay couple married legally in Massachusetts in 2008. Their twins, Sebastiann and Lukas, now 2, were born in Connecticut through in-vitro fertilization with a donor egg and a surrogate mother.

Anthony Raftopol was the biological father and, under family law, had full parental rights. But when the couple tried to obtain a birth certificate, also naming Shawn, they were told he had no legal claim to the children.

Read the article: http://abcnews.go.com/Health/connecticut-surrogacy-law-genetic-parents-legal-rights/story?id=12662224