Lawmakers in the country's National Assembly on Tuesday start
debating a bioethics bill that unwinds some of western Europe's
strictest rules governing medically-assisted pregnancies, a campaign
promise of President Emmanuel Macron.
Under existing law in France, IVF is available only to opposite-sex
couples, and only for reasons of infertility or the risk of
transmission of a disease or medical condition to the child or
either parent.
Health Minister Agnes Buzyn forecasts a roughly two-thirds increase
in demand for IVF procedures, with an extra 2,000 women annually
registering for treatment.
Couples already wait an average of 12 months from registration to
their first attempt at IVF. Clinicians at France's network of public
sperm banks (CECOS) said the supply of cryopreserved sperm only just
meets demand.
Moreover, they predict lifting donor anonymity could prompt
three-quarters of registered male and female donors to deny clinics
the use of their sperm and eggs under the new rules.
"To say 'everything is going to be ok' would be burying your head in
the sand," Nathalie Rives, president of the CECOS federation, told
Reuters.
"There will be a period of instability, with increased demand and
the need to recruit new donors. We don't know how long this
instability will last and whether there will be a shortage."
The bioethics bill, which would also allow women to freeze their
eggs for non-medical reasons to enhance their chances of having
children, is Macron's first major societal reform.
Medically assisted reproduction - such as IVF - is widely available
to all women in countries such as Britain, Belgium, Spain. But in
France, it has fed into a broader debate about the commercialization
of healthcare and gay rights.
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"The right to know one’s origins is a vital right, a fundamental
right,” said Arthur Kermalvezen, 35, who turned to DNA tests to
track down his biological father and has campaigned for the lifting
of anonymity.
The legalization of gay marriage in France six years ago sparked
massive street protests even though the influence of the Catholic
Church was thought to be in decline.
In a sign France has become more socially liberal, polls show a
majority of French people back the bioethics reform.
Professor Rachel Levy, who runs the CECOS center at the Tenon
Hospital in Paris, said donor anonymity would remain in place for 13
months after the legislation comes into effect in an effort to help
sperm banks build up stocks.
There would then be a second phase during which existing donors
would say if they consent to their cryopreserved sperm being used
under the new rules. The samples of those who refuse will be
destroyed later.
"It's a challenging situation," Levy said.
(Reporting by Marine Pennetier and Michaela Cabrera; additional
reporting by Elizabeth Pineau; Writing by Richard Lough; Editing by
Peter Graff)
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