Chinese woman seeking to freeze her eggs loses court case
Send a link to a friend
[July 25, 2022]
By Martin Quin Pollard and Roxanne Liu
BEIJING (Reuters) - An unmarried woman in
China has lost a court challenge seeking to freeze her eggs,
highlighting concerns about a lack of technology options for Chinese
people who consider delaying parenthood.
Teresa Xu, now 34, sued a Beijing hospital in December 2019, accusing it
of violating her rights by refusing to freeze her eggs due to her
marital status, in a landmark case of a Chinese woman fighting for her
reproductive rights.
It is difficult for healthy women in China to access assisted-birth
technology to delay their childbearing. National rules allow such
methods only for medical issues, such as treating infertility or
preserving the fertility of people before going through certain
therapies.
The Chaoyang District People's Court in Beijing ruled last week there
was no clear law on the specific application of assisted reproductive
technologies in China, while saying they must be provided for medical
purposes, according to a copy of the decision verified by Reuters on
Sunday.
Xu said she was "angry" about the July 18 verdict and planned to appeal.
"It's a small, temporary setback," she said in a video on the WeChat
social media platform after receiving the ruling on Friday. "But I still
believe that single Chinese women's reproductive rights will improve and
advance."
The court dismissed Xu's claim in its entirety.
Her challenge cited two Chinese provinces that have eased certain
barriers for single women to access some assisted birth technology and a
statement by the national authorities that China's laws do not deny
single women's right of birth. But the court found these did not
establish that the Chinese health authority allows egg freezing for
non-medical reasons.
[to top of second column]
|
Teresa Xu, 31, talks to a supporter outside Chaoyang People's Court
before a court hearing of her suit against a Beijing hospital for
rejecting her request to freeze her eggs as an unmarried woman, in
Beijing, China December 23, 2019. REUTERS/Florence Lo
Xu visited the Beijing Obstetrics
and Gynaecology Hospital in November 2018, wanting to freeze her
eggs while she focussed on her career as a writer on gender issues,
she said when she launched her case the next year.
The hospital argued that egg freezing has various
health risks and that delayed pregnancy or single motherhood may
lead to other social problems, the court decision said. The hospital
said it would reject any request to freeze eggs simply to delay
parenthood.
The hospital did not immediately respond on Monday to a Reuters
request for comment.
Xu, from the northeastern province of Heilongjiang, said that on her
first visit to the hospital for a checkup, the doctor asked her
marital status and urged her to have a child right away, rather than
freezing her eggs.
On her second visit, the doctor told her she could not proceed any
further, she said.
Xu said she considered illegal clinics in China but decided against
the idea, and that going abroad for such services was too expensive
for her.
(Reporting by Martin Quin Pollard and Roxanne Liu; Additional
reporting by Beijing newsroom; Editing by William Mallard)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|