Logo image
Donor gametes and embryos: who wants to know what about whom, and why?
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Donor gametes and embryos: who wants to know what about whom, and why?

P. Broderick and I. Walker
Politics and the Life Sciences, Vol.20(1), pp.29-42
2001
pdf
Borderick_and_Walker_2001.pdfDownloadView
Published (Version of Record) Open Access
url
Free to Read *No subscription requiredView

Abstract

Many treatments for infertility require the use of donated gametes or embryos. Arguments have been made that all parties involved (donors, recipients, and children) should have open access to information about one another. The present article reports a survey of attitudes of 77 donors and 327 recipients in the state of Western Australia. Donors and recipients endorsed a register of nonidentifying information, but were less keen on a register of identifying information. They believed that medical personnel should have access to such registers, and that donors and recipients (but not children) should have access to nonidentifying, but not identifying, information. Typically, the sort of information respondents wanted to access pertained to health status and physical characteristics. Overwhelmingly, both donors and recipients saw gamete and embryo donation as more like blood donation than like adoption.

Details

Metrics

268 File views/ downloads
86 Record Views
Logo image