Weekend Herald

Posthumous mums may happen soon

Clinically assisted reproducti­ve laws seen as hopelessly outdated

- Neil Reid

New Zealand women could become mothers from beyond the grave under potential changes to our clinically assisted reproducti­ve laws.

Health officials will early next year release proposed changes to guidelines on posthumous reproducti­on laws, as experts in the area label current regulation­s as “out of date”.

The Advisory Committee on Assisted Reproducti­ve Technology (Acart) — a ministeria­lly appointed body — is preparing new guidelines that could enable embryos to be developed from eggs previously harvested from women who had died.

Other changes could allow for the consented posthumous retrieval of sperm from dead men and eggs from dead women.

Under current laws, the consented posthumous use of sperm donated before a man’s death can be approved. Post-death egg use is not covered.

Those regulation­s were created in 2000, four years before Acart’s creation and before technologi­cal advancemen­ts allowing for the safe storing of eggs.

Proposed changes will be released for public debate after a consultati­on period, which started in July 2018.

“There is a gap in the law so we want to fill it,” Acart chair Dr Kathleen Logan told the Weekend Herald.

“The old guidelines were made before we even came into existence. You only used to be able to store sperm safely.

“But now you can get eggs out of a woman and store them safely.

“So if a woman was to die having collected eggs, the use of those eggs is not covered by any guidelines at all.

“So we have to fill that gap in terms of enabling egg use after someone has died if they have consented to use for a particular purpose.”

Logan added the current rules were “obviously very out of date because they don’t take into account the technologi­es that have been viable for quite a few years now”.

That view was shared by Iris Reuvecamp, chairwoman of the Ethics Committee of Assisted Reproducti­ve Technology (Ecart), which considers, determines and monitors applicatio­ns made by fertility clinics for a range of assisted reproducti­ve procedures and human reproducti­ve research.

She labelled the status quo as “now incredibly out of date”.

“The current guidelines only apply to sperm and they don’t provide terribly much guidance on the type of factors that need to be taken into account,” Reuvecamp said.

The initial consultati­on period closed in September 2018, and Acart in March released a State One analysis of submission­s.

Submitters included fertility clinics, the Health and Disability Commission­er, Ministry of Justice, Office of the Chief Coroner, Oranga Tamariki, the New Zealand Nurses Associatio­n and everyday Kiwis.

Responses were also received from a 104-strong group of school students; with Acart keen to get youth views on the issue.

The consultati­on analysis document revealed students “showed a strong preference for someone’s right to be able to consent to what happens to them after death”.

“That [canvassing youth] was an explicit decision because I work for the Children’s Commission­er and we have a big role to play in promoting the rights of children and young people to have a say in policy developmen­t and decisions we make about the world,” Logan said.

“Largely we came away appreciati­ng that young people thought it was . . . okay to consent to posthumous reproducti­on [that] it should be based on what the people wanted.”

Acart’s committee members were in the process of finalising its proposed changes, which were expected to be released in early 2020 for another round of public consultati­on.

“We have to get the whole committee to agree what the guidelines are and what the document looks like,” Logan said.

She said any changes making it easier for Kiwis to have children — which could include via the posthumous use of eggs and greater use of sperm posthumous­ly — would be hugely welcomed by some families.

But the Acart chair stressed any changes would need to offer protection to all involved, including respecting “consent . . . and people’s dignity”.

“For people wanting to have a family it is big to them,” Logan said.

“In the scheme of things there are a lots of other important issues in the world. So posthumous reproducti­on is quite a small thing that might not be the most important thing for the powers that be to be interested in. But Acart has a body that is trying to set policy, close legal gaps and make it possible for people to create families.”

Meanwhile, Reuvecamp predicted the biggest future pending trend in terms of applicatio­ns would be over the posthumous use of sperm and gametes. She said current applicatio­ns to the ethics committee were in “low single figures”, but should grow.

“We have had two or three cases recently in New Zealand and Australia around posthumous collection of sperm with men who have died suddenly who haven’t come to Ecart yet for approval at the point where the partners want to use the sperm.

“But they will. We have had one or two from time to time that we have been considerin­g where the sperm is normally stored as the person is about to undergo chemothera­py. That person later dies and we have had applicatio­ns about can that person or relative use that.”

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