Yorkshire Post

‘Test-tube baby’ tells of family’s hate mail ordeal

Louise’s support for new fertility pioneers

- GRACE HAMMOND NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT

THE WORLD’S first “test-tube baby” has said she hopes families who undergo cutting-edge fertility treatments – such as “three-parent” babies – are not subject to the same harassment her family received after pioneering IVF.

Louise Brown’s family was bombarded with hate mail after she was born.

Ms Brown said she is still subject to “cruel and ill-informed” comments online from time to time.

She added that she hopes people who undergo today’s pioneering fertility treatments – such as mitochondr­ial replacemen­t therapy – do not suffer the same barrage of negativity.

On November 10, 1977, exactly 40 years ago, Lesley Brown, who with husband John had been trying to conceive for nine years, became pregnant after undergoing in-vitro fertilisat­ion.

Nine months later, their daughter Louise was born – the first baby born following IVF.

Six million babies have been born thanks to the technique, pioneered by British scientist Robert Edwards and his obstetrici­an colleague Patrick Steptoe.

Ms Brown, a clerk at a freight company, said: “People put cruel and ill-informed comments on the internet just about whenever there is a story about me. But I just ignore it.”

Asked whether she thought families who use the “three-person baby” technique will get similar mail, she replied: “I hope they don’t.”

The world’s first three-parent baby was born last year. Abrahim Hassan, whose Jordanian mother was treated by a US team in Mexico, was conceived from an egg containing DNA from his mother and father, and a tiny amount of mitochondr­ial DNA from a third person – a female donor.

The aim was to prevent Abrahim inheriting defective mitochondr­ia, rod-like batteries in cells, that could give him Leigh syndrome – a fatal nervous system disorder.

Earlier this year doctors at the Newcastle Fertility at Life clinic were awarded the first official licence to create a baby with three genetic parents.

Ms Brown said she would have tried IVF if she had needed to.

Her sons – one of whom is named after the scientists who developed the technique – were conceived naturally.

The 39-year-old also hit out at rationing in the NHS.

“I am not an expert on IVF but I do believe it should be available to as many people as possible,” she said.

“Earlier this year I attended an event in the European Parliament in Brussels, which looked at infertilit­y in nine countries across the EU.

“It showed there is a huge difference in what treatment is available to you and how much it costs, depending on where you live. The same is true across the UK. Infertilit­y affects one in six couples and my view is that you should get the same treatment wherever you live.”

Data released last week by the campaign group Fertility Fairness showed that the number of local health bodies offering the recommende­d three NHS-funded cycles of IVF has halved in the last five years and stands at 12 per cent.

Ms Brown said her parents, who have both since died, “just wanted to have a baby”.

“Like millions of other couples with fertility problems they were prepared to do pretty much anything to have a baby,” she added.

“They didn’t really see themselves as pioneers at the time, but the older I get the more I appreciate what they went through to have me.”

She said her sons Cameron, ten, and Aiden, four, were conceived naturally, adding: “If I had needed it I would have tried IVF.”

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