Yorkshire Post

Women ‘freeze eggs due to lack of security’

- STEVE TEALE NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

Women are freezing eggs because they cannot find secure relationsh­ips – rather than to delay having children while they pursue a career, a new study suggests.

Of those who opt to preserve eggs for social reasons, most do so due to concerns over “lack of stable partnershi­ps with men”.

WOMEN ARE freezing eggs because they cannot find secure relationsh­ips – rather than to delay having children while they pursue a career, a new study suggests.

Of those who opt to preserve eggs for social reasons, most do so due to concerns over “lack of stable partnershi­ps with men committed to marriage and parenting”, according to researcher­s at Yale University.

Many people wrongly believe women preserve their eggs for “frivolous” reasons, experts said, branding a UK law which requires “so-called social egg-freezers” to use them within 10 years as “cruel”.

The research was presented at the European Society of Human Reproducti­on and Embryology (ESHRE) annual meeting in Barcelona by Dr Marcia Inhorn.

Dr Inhorn, an anthropolo­gist at Yale University, said: “The medical literature and media coverage of oocyte cryopreser­vation usually suggest that elective egg-freezing is being used to defer or delay childbeari­ng among women pursuing education and careers.

“Our study, however, suggests that the lack of a stable partner is the primary motivation.”

The researcher­s examined interviews with 150 women, from four IVF clinics in the US and three in Israel, who had completed at least one cycle of egg-freezing for social reasons.

More than four in five did not have partners at the time.

Career planning was the least common reason given for having their eggs frozen, even among women who worked for companies where egg-freezing insurance was offered.

The 15 per cent of women with partners were either in new or uncertain relationsh­ips, with a man not ready or refusing to have children, or with a partner with multiple other partners.

Dr Inhorn said: “Most of the women had already pursued and completed their educationa­l and career goals, but by their late 30s had been unable to find a lasting reproducti­ve relationsh­ip with a stable partner.

“This is why they turned to eggfreezin­g.”

Commenting on the findings, Dr Virginia Bolton, an officer of the British Fertility Society, said: “I think we still have in society at large this misapprehe­nsion that women are freezing eggs for frivolous reasons, because they’d much rather have a career and buy Gucci handbags and earn lots of money working in banks than actually embarking on parenthood.”

Dr Gillian Lockwood, medical director at Midlands Fertility Services, added: “Even though Apple and Google offer egg-freezing to their female executives, it’s quite clear that the majority of women that are freezing their eggs aren’t doing it for career reasons but are doing it because they are not in a position to have a baby.”

Dr Lockwood said UK law, which currently means those freezing eggs for non-medical reasons must use or discard them within 10 years, should be changed to help those hoping to have children.

The lack of a stable partner is the primary motivation. Dr Marcia Inhorn, an anthropolo­gist at Yale University, on egg-freezing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom