Global Times

Donors in demand

Waiting lists for donated eggs surge after child policy loosened

- By Zhang Hui

China has witnessed a growing shortage of donated eggs as more couples chose to have children after the country relaxed its family planning policy in 2016.

Couples unable to have children are having to wait up to 10 years for in vitro fertilizat­ion (IVF) treatment in public hospitals this year, Yangtze Evening News reported.

The demand for assisted reproducti­ve technology has risen significan­tly after the country loosened its policy, allowing couples to have two children. Patients with infertilit­y have had to wait in long queues at hospitals in recent days, Liao Xi, deputy director of Beijing Perfect Family Hospital which specialize­s in infertilit­y, said on a reproducti­ve health forum on December 2, news site chinanews.com reported.

Over 45 million people currently suffer from infertilit­y, Li Yanqiu, deputy president of the China Associatio­n of Reproducti­ve Health Industry, said on the forum. But Liao said that there are only 432 approved clinics nationwide performing around 700,000 fertility procedures each year.

The lengthy waiting period in public hospitals has also led to a boom in the black market for donated eggs, while some couples have turned to clinics in foreign countries.

Posts asking for help and complainin­g about the long waiting period for donated eggs for IVF treatment are all over social media and online medical platforms.

In a response to a patient query in May 2016, Sun Yun, who identifies herself as a doctor from Renji Hospital Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine on the online medical platform haodf.com, said that patients who wanted IVF with donor’s eggs had to wait at least five years in Shanghai due to the shortage.

Jiang Yunshan, a doctor from the Reproducti­ve and Genetic Center of the Central Hospital of Xiangtan, Hunan Province, told the Global Times that the long waiting period for IVF with donor’s eggs was due to rising demand for IVF treatment and fewer qualified donors.

“Donors have to meet many requiremen­ts on health, age and height,” Jiang said. Candidates for IVF with donor eggs currently have to wait at least six years at the hospital.

Seeing the opportunit­y, a number of US and Thai fertility clinics have opened accounts on China’s Twitterlik­e platform Weibo to promote their business.

A liaison office of a New York-based fertility center in Beijing has

seen its business grow in the past two years.

“The center opened its China branch and launched a Chinese website just two years ago, and the center has conducted around 60 IVF procedures for Chinese people this year,” a nurse surnamed Gong told a Global Times reporter posing as a patient.

According to Gong, patients usually wait for around one month to receive IVF treatment in New York, with eggs donated from the US egg bank. “Some of our Chinese patients are transferre­d from public hospitals due to the lengthy waiting period or medical difficulti­es,” Gong said.

Black market boom

The egg shortage in public hospitals has also led to a boom in the undergroun­d market. A Guangzhoub­ased egg donation agent surnamed Ren said that he could find egg donors in two days and arrange IVF treatment in Guangzhou public hospitals in a month.

“You just let me know your preference for donors, such as her academic background, age, appearance and blood type, and I will find you the right one,” Ren said.

Chinese media has been reporting on the undergroun­d egg market since 2015. Advertisem­ents seeking egg donors and providing donated eggs can be found outside most public hospitals, and many seek to recruit college students as donors.”

A 17-year-old girl almost died after selling 21 of her eggs in Guangzhou, Guangdong, the Nandu Daily reported in 2016.

According to China’s assisted reproducti­ve technology code released by the National Health and Family Planning Commission in 2003, organizati­ons and individual­s were prohibited from conducting egg donations for the purpose of making profit. Only eggs left from IVF treatment could be used for donations, and their sale and purchase were strictly prohibited.

Zhu Lieyu, a lawyer from Guoding Law Firm in Guangzhou, submitted a proposal to include the selling of eggs in China’s Criminal Law in 2015.

“Illegal agencies use misleading advertisem­ents to recruit egg donors and unqualifie­d clinics to perform egg retrievals that could cause infertilit­y in young women. Their actions have had a severe social impact, and should be considered a crime,” Zhu told the Global

Times.

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 ?? Photo: VCG ?? A doctor at the embryo transfer laboratory in the Reproducti­ve Medicine Center of Wuhan Union Medical College Hospital combines sperm and egg. After the country relaxed its family planning policy in 2016, a growing number of women have turned to IVF...
Photo: VCG A doctor at the embryo transfer laboratory in the Reproducti­ve Medicine Center of Wuhan Union Medical College Hospital combines sperm and egg. After the country relaxed its family planning policy in 2016, a growing number of women have turned to IVF...

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