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The High Price of Donation

By Jennifer Liss, WireTap. Posted October 7, 2005.


Young college women are increasingly being targeted by egg donation agencies for their good looks and their good grades.

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The ad in Jessica’s college newspaper said that she could make $80,000 donating her eggs. But "Jessica"* isn’t the tall blonde the ad called for. And her weight was a strike against her. A size 16, she weighs well over what most egg donation agencies will accept.

What she did have going for her is that she is the grandchild of Holocaust survivors. Jewish, Asian and Indian egg donors -- she would learn -- are in great demand.

So at 21 she decided to ditch the agency route and try to sell her eggs on her own. She said she loved the idea of helping infertile couples fulfill their desire to become parents. And the money she made would help her pay off credit card debt.

The first time she made $4,000 and had "the easiest donation of all time." But after the fourth donation she ended up in the emergency room with dehydration. It was her own fault, she says, and giggles over irresponsibly planning a road trip after the donation procedure. By the time she graduated, Jessica had earned $23,000 through egg donation.

Do her parents know she donated eggs for cash? No. Does she plan on donating again? Yes, this winter.

Jessica’s story may be more common than we think, because little is known about college students who donate their eggs. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) report that they do not collect information on donors’ age, race, income, or education levels.

But we do know that one in six American couples struggle with infertility, and the demand for viable eggs is increasing. Assisted Reproduction Technology (ART) procedures performed in the U.S. increased 78 percent from 1996 to 2002, according to the CDC.

Outdoing Nature

"Caroline,"* who used to model, earned a high G.P.A. at a reputable liberal arts college. A three-time egg donor, she pocketed over $20,000 for her efforts. Now 25 and living in New Jersey with her husband and young child, she doesn’t regret a thing.

In many ways, students like Caroline fit the description of a perfect egg donor. The American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) says that younger women respond more favorably to the hormone medication used during the donor procedure, and their eggs result in higher pregnancy rates. Caroline’s good grades, hot looks, and spotless health history, combined with her young age made her a highly sought-after donor.

Darlene Pinkerton of the egg donation agency A Perfect Match says that 80 percent of her donors are college students. And Dawn Hunt, owner of Fertility Alternatives, says that 90 percent of her donors are college students.

Hunt used to advertise for egg donors in family and parenting publications. But dissatisfied with the lack of response, now she sticks almost exclusively with college publications.

A typical classified ad in a college publication will call for a donor under 29, physically attractive, with an impressive S.A.T. score. It will list a high dollar figure, but usually won't mention the procedure or the legal, medical or ethical risks. (One ad awkwardly and inaccurately encourages students to "donate to infertile couples some of the many eggs your body disposes monthly.")

For about five years the Stanford Daily has run a special classified section reserved for egg and sperm donation ads. Several years ago, a Stanford student suffered a stroke due to a rare reaction to one of the synthetic hormones used in egg donation. The current editor-in-chief does not know if the newspaper received any complaints about the classified section.

How It Works

How does egg donation work? First, a donor is screened for genetic diseases and H.I.V. She then undergoes a psychological evaluation. Once "approved," she is given synthetic hormones to self-administer over a series of weeks.

During a normal ovulation, a woman releases one egg. But the hormonal medication stimulates the donor’s ovaries to produce many eggs -- sometimes a few dozen. This is called "controlled super-ovulation."

Once the eggs are mature the donor receives an injection that triggers ovulation. Thirty-six hours later, the eggs are retrieved through the vagina with an ultrasound-guided needle. The menstrual cycle of both the donor and the recipient have been synchronized. After the eggs are fertilized, the embryos are placed in the recipient’s uterus. Hopefully, a pregnancy will stick.


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Jennifer Liss is a writer living in San Francisco.

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Substituted ethics
Posted by: ssegallmd on Oct 7, 2005 3:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
'Ethical considerations' is code for *other* people's ethics, that is, what offends them. And there is only one group that perpetually attempts to impose its preferences on the behavior of others, especially the behavior of womwn, especially as it pertains to reproduction. You can be sure that those who speak for His Royal Godness will be chiming in on this soon.

I suspect that given the recent ruling of the Indiana legislature that only heterosexual women that are married may legally participate in medically assisted pregnancies, that only women who are fit in His eyes will be lawfully permitted to participate as ovum donors. Somehow, soon, only Christian women will be allowed to participate. That is what is meant by ethics today, what would Jesus (or more correctly, what did he tell Dobson, Perkins, Robertson and Falwell to have the rest of us) do?

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» RE: Indiana bill Posted by: BlueTigress
adp3d
Posted by: adp3d on Oct 7, 2005 3:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Instead of "donating" eggs for $80,000, I think the correct term is "selling". Also, some might even consider it a form of prostitution.

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» RE: adp3d Posted by: mandiwrite
» RE: adp3d Posted by: cyclone2525
» RE: adp3d Posted by: Mark_in_AZ
Temptation
Posted by: eastcoker on Oct 7, 2005 11:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was thinking about this, about reproductive freedoms and rights.
I have OFTEN felt tempted to donate my eggs. But it is not without risk and it is not wholistic so I have not. I do not support reproduction. Why does a couple need to have a baby? Why not adopt a child from Uganda or the Ukraine? Why not invest that money in a child already born who is deeply suffering? Why not adopt a child from Darfur? No I do not agree at all with egg donation. I think the human race should stop reproducing itself until all the starving and suffering children are taken care of first. Egg donation and fertilization like this is immoral and unethical and I do not support it.

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Children of egg donors
Posted by: BlueTigress on Oct 7, 2005 1:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My husband is adopted and we would go to a support group meeting for people who were looking for their birth parents.

That would be strange to meet the donor and have them say "I needed money for college, so I sold the egg that became you".

Although it is entirely possible that if the physical resemblance was close, the parents would not say anything.

And then there's the ever-popular two people who came from the same egg or sperm donor meet, fall in love, and if appropriately gendered produce a child, unknowingly breaking the incest laws... (I'm joking - mostly)

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Make mine Sunny Side Up!
Posted by: Commie_Ricko on Oct 7, 2005 7:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Smart woman! I would do the same thing if I was one!

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Donation or trade?
Posted by: gp on Oct 7, 2005 11:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Maybe I missed something, but isn't the definition of donation "to make a gift"? Aren't gifts free? And isn't the transfer of property for a price a sale?

If the people advocating this type of transaction really felt comfortable with it, they would call it by its name: A sale. Or a purchase. But definitely not a donation.

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» RE: Donation or trade? Posted by: Mark_in_AZ