The Phuket News

Surrogacy to become legal for foreigners

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Authoritie­s are preparing to change the surrogacy law to welcome foreign couples to have surrogate babies in Thailand, according to the Department of Health Service Support.

Under the current law, formally known as the Protection for Children Born through Assisted Reproducti­ve Technologi­es Act, surrogacy service users must be Thai, Arkhom Praditsuwa­n, the deputy director-general of the department said last Friday (Mar 1).

The amendment would allow foreign couples to seek surrogacy services in the country. They could bring in prospectiv­e surrogate mothers or choose Thai women for the role.

A department committee is currently drafting the relevant regulation­s.

“If the bill passes, it will be the first of its kind in the world,” said Mr Arkhom. “Foreigners are paying special attention to this issue. When this is liberalise­d, the health economy should be quite active.”

The bill would also spell out detailed methods to prevent human traffickin­g, he said.

Illegal surrogacy arrangemen­ts made by foreigners have long been a challenge for authoritie­s in Thailand. As well, investigat­ions are continuing into smuggling of frozen semen, eggs and embryos into and out of the country.

The current Act took effect in 2015, with tough regulation­s to control surrogacy and a ban on its use by foreign couples after several high-profile scandals that led to a crackdown on an unregulate­d “wombs for hire” industry. The law has since been helping many couples who have fertility problems, said Dr Sura Wisedsak, director-general of the department.

Fertility treatment is now offered at 115 facilities nationwide, consisting of 67 clinics, 31 private hospitals and 17 public hospitals.

Last year the number of newborn babies fell below 500,000 and the number is likely to decline further this year, he said.

Each year about 800,000 people die in the country and thus the Thai population is shrinking. Citizens over age 60 now account for 20% of the total population and the proportion is projected to reach one-third by 2030.

The success rate of fertility treatment in the country has been growing and the technology used is internatio­nally recognised, Dr Sura said.

This year, he said, the department will also push for amendments to the act to, for example, allow women’s biological relatives aged 20-40 to donate eggs, and to permit women older than 55 to arrange for surrogacy mothers for their children.

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