Global Times - Weekend

market triggers debate acyblack rog lation, legislatio­n sur regu ed r leg ove Al GRAY AREA IN SPOTLIGHT

- By GT staff reporters Page Editor: xukeyue@globaltime­s.com.cn

On the doors of the women’s toilets at Peking University Third Hospital Reproducti­ve Center, it is hard to miss the stickers which bear the words “surrogacy” and “gender selection,” along with a phone number. With couples from all over China coming to seek the help of assisted reproducti­ve technology (ART) in the hospital where the first “In Vitro Fertilizat­ion (IVF)-baby” in China was born, these stickers are enticing, but also dangerous as surrogacy is illegal in China.

Song Lin (pseudonym), who has been receiving treatment in the reproducti­ve center for five years, trying to have an IVF-baby, is one of those being allured by the stickers. “I have gone through two rounds of egg retrieval and five times of embryo transfer but I still cannot have my own baby… I felt exhausted and thought surrogacy may be the best answer,” said Song.

However, when Song dialed the number on the sticker, she could not get through or was told the number does not exist. On WeChat, she later shared her experience in a mutual-aid group among women who are also trying to have an IVF-baby and some warned her of swindlers and some said people they knew had got babies via undergroun­d surrogacy services in South China’s Guangdong Province.

Song gave up the idea of seeking surrogacy due to the high risk. But discussion­s over surrogacy have continued with undergroun­d surrogacy services growing in China due to the increasing demand, and the topic has recently attracted more attention as certain public hospitals in multiple places across China were reportedly involved in commercial surrogacy.

Some hospitals in Central China’s Hunan and Hubei provinces, East China’s Zhejiang Province and Guangdong Province were reportedly connected with surrogacy y organizati­ons to offer ART services es to surrogate mothers or selling birth rth certificat­es, media reported. Local authoritie­s vowed to crack down on the illegal use of ART.

Undergroun­d business

According to “Administra­tive Measures for Human Assisted Reproducti­ve Technology” released d in 2001, medical institutio­ns and medical personnel are not allowed d to implement any form of surrogacy acy technology and medical institutio­ns ns that implement surrogacy technology logy will be given a warning and a fine of up to 30,000 yuan and may be held criminally liable. In 2007, the former Ministry of Public Health (now the National Health Commission) revised several administra­tive measures and regulation­s related to ART and reiterated “the implementa­tion of surrogacy technology is prohibited.”

But undergroun­d surrogacy service continues to grow in China with some organizati­ons offering packaged services to cater to needs of the patients.

“Our patients include those who prefer not to give birth and also those who suffer infertilit­y or aphoria,” said Jessy, who works in a Beijing-based private medical institutio­n.

The institutio­n’s services include offering egg and sperm retrieval of the clients in the institutio­n and arranging blastocyst embryo transfer into the surrogate mother in public hospitals to “legalize” the procedure. The institutio­n also provides antenatal care to the surrogate mothers. The total price is around 600,000 to 800,000 yuan, according to Jessy.

Heated discussion­s

For those who worry about the legitimacy of surrogacy in China, Jessy said her institutio­n could also help clients go to the US to use surrogacy, and the total fee is about $140,000.

Although Jessy’s institutio­n also promise to offer a health certificat­e to babies born through surrogacy to eliminate worries, the legal concerns still exist. In fact, for years, the discussion­s over whether surrogacy should be allowed among specific groups or how to further regulate the use of ART have been ongoing.

There are also voices in China that strongly disapprove of surrogacy in any form with some saying that surrogacy not only violates human dignity and fair reproducti­ve rights, it also causes legal disputes.

There are multiple legal risks related to surrogacy in China and contract disputes caused by surrogacy occur frequently as various parties have been involved in the contract.

And the standards for judging similar cases and the applicatio­n of foreign-related laws urgently need to be unified, said Zhong Lan’an, a lawyer from the Beijing-based Jingsh Law Firm.

Surrogacy may involve issues such as custody and property inheritanc­e for children born out of wedlock.

It may also cause disputes over the spouse’s reproducti­ve rights, confirmati­on of parent-child relationsh­ip, liability for children’s health, and liability for the surrogate mother’s health, said Zhong.

For cross-border surrogacy, additional legal issues, including nationalit­y and immigratio­n may arise given that different countries have different legal regulation­s on surrogacy, said the lawyer. Despite the legal risks and prohibitio­n of surrogacy in China, it has continued to be practiced to cater for the growing demand. Zhong noted that as China’s population ages and the fertility rate continues to decline, some people who have a very urgent need to have their own children can have their demand met through surrogacy. But the surrogacy industry is full of chaos and needs to be regulated and managed through legislatio­n. Huang Wenzheng, a demography expert and senior researcher at the Center for China and Globalizat­ion, believes surrogacy should be allowed for some groups, including couples who are unable to have children and those who are past the fertile years but have lost their only child. Simply banning surrogacy may lead to thriving undergroun­d services, resulting in more chaos and illegal activities, said Huang, advising to improve legislatio­n on surrogacy and strictly control the applied range of surrogacy and strengthen supervisio­n of related industries. Although discussion­s over the ethical and legal dilemmas in surrogacy remain in China, many scholars who hold different views on surrogacy agree that the country needs to improve the legislatio­n and regulation on surrogacy and adapt to the adjustment of reproducti­ve policies, and the developmen­t of surrogacy technology.

 ?? Photo: VCG ?? A medical staff member cares for r a newborn at the neonatal care unit it of a hospital in Lianyungan­g, East China’s ina’s Jiangsu Province on January 1, 2024. 024.
Photo: VCG A medical staff member cares for r a newborn at the neonatal care unit it of a hospital in Lianyungan­g, East China’s ina’s Jiangsu Province on January 1, 2024. 024.
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