Shamed doctor who still peddles gender selection
‘Quite a few couples from the UK’
A HArley Street doctor touted his gender selection service to undercover reporters days after being struck off for ‘deplorable’ behaviour.
Paul rainsbury was found guilty of serious professional misconduct after signing 50 prescriptions over six months without a medical licence.
But days after the damning ruling, he was happy to provide undercover Daily Mail reporters with detailed medical advice and arrangements to select the sex of their baby. Gender selection is illegal in the UK.
He told them how, for £14,000, he arranges preliminary medical appointments in Harley Street before patients go to the Crete Fertility Centre for the final treatment.
In a telephone consultation, the 76-yearold advised keeping the procedure a secret from family doctors as it would just cause ‘aggro’. He said: ‘I don’t even want to know who your GP is. There’s no reason at all to involve any of your medical carers.’
He added: ‘Most GPs when you tell them suddenly develop serious moral qualms.’
Mr rainsbury, who says he sees two couples a week wanting gender selection, told our undercover reporters ‘Asians want boys generally’, adding: ‘That’s been since time began.’ He insists sex selection is allowed in Crete, but the Greek National Authority of Assisted reproduction said non-medical gender selection is illegal there.
The Crete Fertility Centre says on its website it offers gender selection only ‘to avoid sex-linked diseases’ and quotes a fertility expert saying gender selection for family balancing is prohibited in the eU.
When the Mail visited, posing as a couple wanting to have a girl to balance their two boys, the centre’s scientific director, Dr Mattheos Fraidakis, said this would be possible. He added: ‘We are doing that. We have quite a few couples from the UK doing that – five, six seven couples from UK are coming here for the same purpose.’
Dr Fraidakis admitted ‘gender selection is not legal’ for family balancing in Greece, and initially said the centre got round this by checking all the embryos for health.
While doing this, they can choose the gender by selecting the X and y chromosomes that determine sex, he said. Asked if this meant gender selection for family balancing was possible he said: ‘yeah, yeah, that’s OK.’
When asked about costs, Dr Fraidakis offered a simple sex selection without checking the other chromosomes for 6,000 euros rather than the usual price of 7,000 euros for the full medical check.
Ulster-born Mr rainsbury set up his rainsbury Fertility clinic in london’s Harley Street in 1990.
In 2006, it emerged he was sending couples to Cyprus to select the sex of their child. Despite the outcry, he continued to offer gender selection services openly on his website.
He moved from his home in east london to Spain 15 years ago, but kept his UK medical registration and ran his london clinic remotely. He was struck off the medical register on July 20 after a GMC hearing in Manchester.
The tribunal heard that he stopped renewing his licence to practise in 2014, despite frequently speaking to UK patients and running his london-based clinic. During this period he signed 50 prescriptions over six months and portrayed himself as a consultant gynaecologist and fertility specialist.
Mr rainsbury admitted he had brought the medical profession into disrepute.
‘I don’t even want to know who your GP is. When you tell them they suddenly develop moral qualms’ PAUL RAINSBURY