Patient pressure: is the tide of cross-border reproductive care beginning to turn?

Reproductive Biomedicine Online
Kamal K Ahuja

Abstract

Two important explanations exist for cross-border reproductive care: restrictive legislation at home and limited access to affordable treatment. Both have recently been subject to patient pressure, favouring domestic and not cross-border services. The oppressive effect of regulation has been best illustrated in Italy, where legislation introduced as Law 40 in 2004 imposed restrictions on embryo freezing and embryo selection. After a decade of legal challenges by patients, the components of Law 40 have now been deemed unconstitutional in Italy. Similarly, a paucity of donor gametes in the UK has left many patients with few options but to seek donors and treatments overseas. Yet new techniques of donor recruitment and a revised allowance of compensation now means that some UK clinics can meet all requirements for donor gametes and patient matching from their own resources.

References

Mar 30, 2010·Human Reproduction·F ShenfieldUNKNOWN ESHRE Taskforce on Cross Border Reproductive Care
Oct 14, 2010·Human Reproduction·R F Storrow
Apr 21, 2011·Human Reproduction·F ShenfieldUNKNOWN ESHRE Task Force 'Cross Border Reproductive Care' (CBRC)
Oct 4, 2011·Reproductive Biomedicine Online·Zeynep B Gürtin, Marcia C Inhorn
Feb 3, 2012·Reproductive Biomedicine Online·Kamal K Ahuja
Oct 15, 2014·Reproductive Biomedicine Online·Giuseppe BenagianoLuca Gianaroli

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Citations

Aug 6, 2015·Reproductive Biomedicine Online·Gillian Lockwood, Martin H Johnson
May 29, 2018·Journal of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics·Mahmoud SalamaPasquale Patrizio
Nov 19, 2020·Reproductive Biomedicine & Society Online·Heather Jacobson
Jul 31, 2021·Reproductive Biomedicine Online·Vanessa PataiaKamal K Ahuja

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